The eurozone inflation rate
has fallen to 0.3% in August, near a five-year low, adding to fears of a
deflationary spiral, according to Eurostat figures.
The drop, driven by lower food
and energy prices, will add to pressure on the European Central Bank (ECB) to
take action to stimulate the economy.
Separate figures showed the
unemployment rate remained near a record high at 11.5% in July.
The ECB meets next Thursday
to decide on interest rates.
Most analysts are not
expecting any action yet, but speculation is growing that in the coming months
it may inject money into the system, a practice called quantitative easing, in
the hope of stimulating growth and pushing up prices.
Mario Draghi, head of the
ECB, has previously described inflation at below 1% to be in a
"danger
zone".
"There is plenty of
ammunition here...to argue for more policy support," wrote Jennifer
McKeown from Capital Economics in a research note,
"While the Bank is
unlikely to act at its meeting next week, it is likely to hint that
quantitative easing is firmly on the table," she added.
Core inflation, which
excludes food and energy, rose to 0.9% from 0.8%.
The jobless figures showed
improvements in Spain, Portugal and Ireland. "Along with Germany, these
countries accounted for the bulk of the improvement seen over July," said
Timo del Carpio, european economist at RBC.
"The notable exceptions
this month were once again the usual culprits. France's headline rate edged up
to 10.3%, driven by a 19,000 increase on the month. More notably, Italy's
unemployment rose to 12.6%, once again a hair's breadth short of its record
peak," he added.
BBC Business
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