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Inflation Keeps on Growing: January Data Highest in 15 Years

MTI-Hungary Today 2022.02.11.

Consumer prices in Hungary rose by 7.9 percent year-on-year in January, climbing from 7.4 percent in the previous two months, data released by the Central Statistical Office (KSH) on Friday show. The last time the country saw higher inflation was in 2007.

Food price inflation climbed into the double digits, increasing by 10.1 percent. Cooking oil prices jumped 33.4 percent, flour prices climbed 31.0 percent, milk prices rose by 16.9 percent and the price of poultry was up 18.0 percent.

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Prices in the category of goods that includes vehicle fuel increased by 11.3 percent, lifted by a 22.5 percent rise in vehicle fuel prices.

Prices of tobacco and spirts rose by 7.7 percent as tobacco prices climbed 10.0 percent.

Clothing prices increased by 4.0 percent and consumer durable prices rose by 7.9 percent. Household energy prices edged up 1.2 percent and service prices climbed 5.2 percent.

Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and fuel prices, was 7.4 percent.

Inflation calculated using a basket of goods and services used by pensioners stood at 7.4 percent.

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In a month-on-month comparison, headline CPI was 1.4 percent.

State’s Statistical Office: Growing inflation global trend

Commenting on the data, KSH deputy chairman Laszlo Windisch said growing inflation was a global trend. January figures were around 12 percent in Estonia and Lithuania, and in the same range as Hungary in Latvia and the Netherlands, he said.

Hungary’s monthly rise of 0.5 percentage point is in the mid-range of that of European Union countries, he said.

Growing food prices have contributed to the January spike, and the price caps introduced by the government will show up in the February figures, he said.

Meanwhile, the government’s utility price caps have offset the strain on households at a time of 75 percent growth of energy producers’ prices, he added.

Featured photo illustration by József Balaton/MTI


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