Finland’s Slowest Inflation Rate in the Euro Area Despite Increase in Consumer Prices in June.

Finnish inflation rate is the lowest in the euro area according to EU rules

In Finland, consumer prices increased by 0.6 percent in June compared to a year ago, according to Statistics Finland. Food and non-alcoholic beverages became cheaper by 0.4 percent, while housing, water, electricity, gas, and fuels decreased by 0.9 percent. Alcoholic beverages and tobacco prices rose by 4.3 percent, and clothing and footwear prices increased by 3.4 percent. Education saw the highest price increase of 7.9 percent.

In the euro area, consumer prices increased by 2.5 percent year-on-year in June. Finland had the slowest inflation rate in the euro area at 0.6 percent. Senior market economist Jari Hännikäinen highlighted core inflation, which remained at 2.9 percent and contributed significantly to annual inflation. The rise in prices in June was primarily driven by services, with service prices increasing by 4.1 percent annually.

Business economist Roope Ohlsbom noted that Finland’s low inflation has boosted consumer confidence but believes that the European Central Bank’s interest rates are still too high for Finland, resulting in inflation falling below the ECB’s target of two percent

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