Something Something Inflation

Image source:

What's going on?

Data out on Friday showed inflation in Europe surged to a 13-year-high last month, and we can probably just go ahead and copy/paste at this stage, right?

What does this mean?

Europes story is much the same as everyone elses: the same supply chain disruptions have been forcing the regions companies to pass higher costs onto customers, and the same energy shortages sent gas prices to record highs on Friday. That drove consumer prices up 3.4% in September versus the year before. And even if you strip out unstable costs like food and energy, prices still rose by 1.9% the biggest jump in the metric since 2008. This isnt going away either: energy prices alone are set to climb even higher after China said last week that it was willing to go to whatever lengths necessary to secure supplies for winter.

Why should I care?

Zooming in: Do you even, like, need a salary?
Germany is in particularly deep schnitzel: inflation in Europes biggest economy hit its highest level for nearly three decades, with prices up 4.1% on the year before (tweet this). So, uh, youd think German workers mightve given a little more thought to macroeconomic trends before going on strike to demand fair pay. Economists are worried that if wage increases spread across the region, itll push up prices even more and magnify the problem.

The bigger picture: A shortage here, a shortage there.
Another day, another shortage this time silicon, which has fallen victim to yet another production cut in China as it tries to curb power consumption. Thats caused the price of the second-most abundant material in the world to skyrocket 300% in the last two months. And given that silicon is used in everything from microchips to concrete, that could prove costly for companies and consumers alike.

Originally posted as part of the Finimize daily email.

The top 2 financial news stories in 3 minutes. Join over one million Finimizers

Read next

Sorry Sight

Sign up to Finimize

Get the two most important global financial news stories each day. Sent at midnight UK time.

Get started with one email a day

The top financial news stories in 3 minutes.