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Topic: WTF? Food prices expected to raise up to 50% in German supermarket. - page 5. (Read 606 times)

legendary
Activity: 3080
Merit: 1500
Not just Germany, rather many other countries in EU are facing the same issue. EU countries are one of the major importers of Russian oil. Due to the war, many countries have reduced the size of such import which led to fuel price increase. Along with fuel price increase, the price of commodities are going up because the transport cost is going up. Then it comes to inflation which is reducing the "purchasing power parity" of EURO which is again eating into the price of the commodities.

It can be solved if they are able to import oil from any other country. But US has imposed sanctions on Venezuela where they could have got cheapest oil. If I look at the previous data (2019), Russia accounts for roughly 27% of oil imports for EU. When such a big chuck of an import dries out, it pushes the price of everything dependent on oil. EU should stop being the puppets of US and UK. One has to remember that these two countries are responsible for most number of wars in the history of humankind.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 2017
I am not sure that this is not a fake news, because it is in several digital media but not in any of the big ones. In any case, there is inflation all over Europe, and there will continue to be, but such a rise in supermarkets, if it materializes, should make the ECB think about what to do, since its main mission is to control inflation, and lately it had been a bit lenient with it.

'...the German trade association said that before the Ukrainian war, prices had already risen by 5% in Germany "for the entire product line" because of rising energy costs. Moreover, "the second wave of price hikes is coming, definitely by double-digit percentages." Aldi also expects German food prices to rise by 20% to 50% in the next few weeks. According to a survey recently published by the Ifo Institute, almost all German food retail companies plan to increase prices. "Germany's food supply is guaranteed for the foreseeable next year," said the German Agricultural Organization. "But beyond that time frame, it is difficult to make predictions. "'

Source: German food prices will rise sharply, Germans have to face a more impoverished life.

The problem with inflation is that there is no short-term solution to it. You have to have at least a medium-term vision to fight it and it cannot be based only on withdrawing liquidity from the market as the ECB plans to do. Energy policy also plays an important role, and the solution proposed to stop depending on Russian gas is more expensive.

With respect to the ECB, another problem that may be encountered is that of a catch-22 situation. After many years of giving massive amounts of drugs to the junkie, you cannot withdraw all the drugs at once, or the junkie will go cold turkey. Let's see how they do it without a major crisis.
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