Inflation in France Exceeds 5 Percent in May

Inflation in France Exceeds 5 Percent in May
A city view shows the French flag over the city skyline and the Eiffel Tower in Paris on March 30, 2016. (Benoit Tessier/Reuters)
Naveen Athrappully
5/31/2022
Updated:
5/31/2022
0:00

Annual French inflation exceeded 5 percent in May as citizens continued to be battered by surging prices of food and energy, according to provisional data from the state’s statistical agency.

The 12-month Consumer Price Index (CPI), a measure of inflation, came out at 5.2 percent in May 2022, according to data from INSEE, the French National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. This is the highest level since September 1985. In April 2022, inflation was at 4.8 percent, while in May 2021, the inflation rate was just 1.4 percent.

“Over one month, consumer prices should rise by 0.6 percent, after +0.4 percent in April. After the downturn the previous month, the prices of energy should rise linked with the rebound in petroleum product prices,” INSEE said.

“The increase in food prices should be less sustained than in April. The prices of services and manufactured goods should slow down.”

Food prices rose by 4.2 percent, energy by 28 percent, services by 3.2 percent, and manufactured products by 2.9 percent. The Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) rose by 5.8 percent in May, the highest rate since the early 1990s.

While the CPI is used to measure inflation within France, the HICP is more often used outside France to compare inflation rates among countries that use the euro.

The INSEE data comes as the European Union’s statistics office, Eurostat, published preliminary May inflation data for the eurozone. According to a May 31 press release, inflation in the eurozone is expected to be 8.1 percent in May 2022, up from 7.4 percent in April.

Energy inflation is expected to be at 39.2 percent; food, alcohol, and tobacco at 7.5 percent; nonenergy industrial goods at 7.2 percent; and services at 3.5 percent.

French inflation, at 5.8 percent, is one of the lowest in the European Union according to Eurostat data. Estonia has the highest inflation rate of 20.1 percent, followed by Lithuania with 18.5 percent, Latvia with 16.4 percent, Slovakia with 11.8 percent, Greece with 10.7 percent, and the Netherlands with 10.2 percent.

According to Bank of France Governor François Villeroy de Galhau, the recent spike in inflation makes ending exceptional monetary policy measures even more necessary.

“The latest inflation figures for May in France and other countries confirm the increase we expected and the need for a progressive but resolute monetary policy normalization,” Villeroy de Galhau said in a speech at the French Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority, the country’s financial regulator, according to Reuters.

The decision on normalizing interest rates will be taken at the upcoming European Central Bank’s governing council, Villeroy de Galhau said, adding that increasing rates will potentially benefit the net margins and profitability of French banks.

The French economy shrunk in the first quarter of 2022, contracting by 0.2 percent for the January–March period compared to the previous quarter.

Reuters contributed to this report.