Euro zone inflation stabilized in what the European Central Bank has called the danger zone in February, data showed on Friday, while unemployment remained stuck near record highs ahead of an ECB policy meeting next week.
The European Union's statistics office Eurostat estimated that consumer prices in the 18 countries sharing the Euro rose 0.8% year-on-year in February. That was the same rate as in January and December, after readings of 0.9% in November and 0.7% in October.
ECB President Mario Draghi has warned of the risk of inflation getting stuck in a danger zone below 1 percent, but said again on Thursday that there was clearly no deflation.
February's inflation rate was stable because lower energy costs were offset by more expensive industrial goods and services.
But so-called core inflation, which excludes the most volatile components like energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices, continued to inch higher, to 1.0% year-on-year from 0.8% in January and 0.7% in December.
Price pressures in the Euro zone economy are low because unemployment remains stuck close to record highs. Eurostat said on Friday that 12% of the bloc's workforce was unemployed in January, unchanged from a month before. In absolute terms, the number of people without jobs edged higher to 19,175,000 from 19,158,000 in December, it said.
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Disclaimer & comment rulesThis is what my dog calls deflation with high unemployment...
Mar 03rd, 2014 - 01:02 pm 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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