French Inflation Driven Up by Energy Expenses


TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Inflation in France surged in January as the government phased out several policies aimed at containing surging energy and food prices.

According to preliminary estimates released on Tuesday by the country's statistics agency, Insee, the standardized EU measure of price growth rose 7% from a year ago after a 6.7% increase in December.

The report indicated that inflation, which was in line with expectations, jumped after the government wound back a subsidy for car fuel at the end of the year.

Adding further pressure on energy costs was a 15% hike in government-set regulated gas prices at the start of the year, according to Reuters. Regulated power prices are also set to rise 15% in February, the outlet reported.

Meanwhile, economists expect inflation in France to start easing once increases in energy prices subside. Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire has said that the country’s top economic priority was to bring down energy prices and spiraling inflation. He expects inflation to abate from the middle of 2023 onwards.