Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?

Abstract In August 2021, the German inflation rate is expected to rise to 3.9 %. Part of this is likely due to one-off effects. In Germany, these include above all the reversal of the VAT cut, the expansion of CO2 pricing and price increases due to the scarcity of raw materials and intermediate prod...

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Main Author: ZG Überblick
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Sciendo 2021-09-01
Series:Wirtschaftsdienst
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-021-2996-0
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author ZG Überblick
author_facet ZG Überblick
author_sort ZG Überblick
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In August 2021, the German inflation rate is expected to rise to 3.9 %. Part of this is likely due to one-off effects. In Germany, these include above all the reversal of the VAT cut, the expansion of CO2 pricing and price increases due to the scarcity of raw materials and intermediate products. Nevertheless, there may also be structural reasons for rising inflation. For example, the loose monetary policy and the ECB’s new inflation target are partly to blame for higher inflation risks. In addition, the expansive fiscal policy of the new Biden administration is leading to higher rates of price increases in the US. Other aspects, the possibility of a wage-price spiral and whether inflation is measured correctly at all, will also be discussed in this Zeitgespräch.
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 0043-6275
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language deu
publishDate 2021-09-01
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record_format Article
series Wirtschaftsdienst
spelling doaj-art-498aab63facf4385be6f7da21bf8f8962025-02-02T13:43:03ZdeuSciendoWirtschaftsdienst0043-62751613-978X2021-09-01101967367310.1007/s10273-021-2996-0Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?ZG ÜberblickAbstract In August 2021, the German inflation rate is expected to rise to 3.9 %. Part of this is likely due to one-off effects. In Germany, these include above all the reversal of the VAT cut, the expansion of CO2 pricing and price increases due to the scarcity of raw materials and intermediate products. Nevertheless, there may also be structural reasons for rising inflation. For example, the loose monetary policy and the ECB’s new inflation target are partly to blame for higher inflation risks. In addition, the expansive fiscal policy of the new Biden administration is leading to higher rates of price increases in the US. Other aspects, the possibility of a wage-price spiral and whether inflation is measured correctly at all, will also be discussed in this Zeitgespräch.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-021-2996-0
spellingShingle ZG Überblick
Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
Wirtschaftsdienst
title Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
title_full Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
title_fullStr Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
title_full_unstemmed Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
title_short Inflation Post COVID-19: Are the Concerns Justified?
title_sort inflation post covid 19 are the concerns justified
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-021-2996-0
work_keys_str_mv AT zguberblick inflationpostcovid19aretheconcernsjustified