The eurozone inflation rate decreased to 1.9% in May compared to 2.2% in April thus becoming the first time since September that the rate fell below the European Central Bank’s 2% target. The recent inflation data release has diverted market attention from rising prices toward concerns about potential U.S. tariffs that could impact European economic growth.
The inflation rate decreased because of lower energy costs which spread throughout the economy through declining oil prices. The European Central Bank has maintained a struggle to manage inflation which reached historic peaks because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and pandemic-related supply disruptions.
The return of inflation to target levels leads analysts to predict that the ECB will lower interest rates to boost economic growth. The ECB benchmark rate stands at 2.25% and investors predict a 0.25 percentage point reduction during the upcoming meeting under President Christine Lagarde. The market predictions indicate that the central bank will perform at least one additional rate reduction throughout this year.
The export-based economy of Europe now faces new challenges because President Donald Trump introduced fresh tariffs on European products. The upcoming U.S. trade barriers create uncertainty which makes European businesses particularly concerned because they depend on U.S. market access.
The inflation victory has shifted attention to how new U.S. trade restrictions will affect European economic recovery according to Carsten Brzeski who leads macro analysis at ING.
The positive effects of lower interest rates on investment and consumption will be counteracted by the negative impacts of Trump’s tariffs according to economic experts. The growth outlook will likely deteriorate more because of significant damage to European export sectors including autos and machinery even though inflation has decreased.