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Euro Zone Inflation Surges: Food & Services Drive Unexpected Jump
3 Mar
Summary
- Euro zone inflation unexpectedly rose to 1.9% in February.
- Rising food and services costs are the primary drivers of this inflation.
- The conflict in the Middle East could further escalate energy prices and inflation.

In February, the euro zone experienced an unexpected rise in inflation, reaching 1.9% from 1.7% the previous month. This increase surpassed economists' forecasts of 1.7%. The primary drivers were escalating costs for unprocessed food and services, which offset lower energy prices. Underlying inflation, excluding volatile food and energy, also climbed to 2.4% from 2.2%.
Analysts attribute part of this inflationary pressure to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, which could continue to drive up energy prices. A sustained increase in oil prices, for instance, could lift headline inflation by approximately 0.2 percentage points if prices stabilize at current levels. This situation presents a challenge for the European Central Bank (ECB), although inflation is still projected to be below the 2% target in 2026 and 2027.
Economists caution that prolonged conflict could push inflation into the mid-2% range. While the ECB typically overlooks temporary energy-induced inflation, it may be less patient than in 2022, especially given that domestic inflation has been persistently above target for years. The ECB's next meeting is scheduled for March 19, but a policy change is unlikely as the bank awaits more evidence of persistent economic shifts.




