This Tuesday the month-end figures arrived and asked whether the long cost-of-living squeeze was lifting. In Italy the answer was a cautious yes, with inflation easing, while in Spain prices stayed stubbornly stuck.
Germany, meanwhile, rewired its welfare safety net and weighed a harder line toward Beijing. From Rome to Madrid to Berlin, the day’s theme was a single one: relief arriving in some places and lingering elsewhere.
Today’s Europe Intelligence Brief covers the region’s economy and politics, country by country. We pulled it together from major European outlets in German, French, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Polish, and English.
Italy — The Squeeze Loosens
A Cautious Relief
Italy’s month-end estimate showed annual inflation easing to about three percent. It marked a gentle step down from the month before.
The everyday shopping basket of common goods also grew a little lighter. For households, it was the first real loosening in months.
Still Above Target
Food and transport costs led the slowdown across the country. Energy, by contrast, ticked back up and offset part of the relief.
The headline still sits well above the central bank’s preferred level. The easing is real, but the work of cooling prices is far from done.
Germany — Rewiring The Safety Net
A Contested Overhaul
A major overhaul of welfare for the long-term jobless took effect in Germany. What began as a savings drive became a restructuring of state support.
Much changes at once for those who rely on the aid. The rules around work, payments, and obligations have all been reshaped.
The State Reshapes Its Aid
The reform has been among the government’s most divisive projects. Supporters call it overdue, while critics fear it leaves the vulnerable exposed.
It reflects a state trying to balance compassion against cost. How the change lands for households will be felt over the coming months.
Spain — The Squeeze That Won’t Lift
Prices Hold Firm
Spain’s month-end estimate showed inflation holding firm at about three percent. It refused to ease as it had just across the border in Italy.
The core measure, which strips out energy and food, eased only a notch. The relief seen elsewhere has yet to reach Spanish households.
An Uneven Continent
The contrast underlined how unevenly relief arrives across Europe. The same month brought easing to some countries and none to others.
For Spain, a star performer on growth, the stickiness stings. Its households feel little of the loosening their neighbours enjoy.
Germany — The China Balancing Act
A Harder Line Weighed
Berlin’s governing coalition weighed a tougher line on trade toward Beijing. The leadership was set to discuss it at a meeting this week.
For an export economy, the question is delicate and politically fraught. Germany sells heavily to China even as it frets over the relationship.
Exports Versus Principle
A harder stance carries real risk for German factories and jobs. Yet the pressure to confront Beijing on trade keeps growing.
The chancellor must steer between commerce and a firmer position. It is a balancing act with no easy or costless answer.
Italy — The Cooling Print
The Detail Behind The Number
The breakdown showed slowing food prices and softer transport costs. Recreation and culture also eased over the month.
Regulated energy prices, however, crept up and capped the relief. The result was a broadly flat reading from one month to the next.
A Watchful Central Bank
The figures will be read closely by the European Central Bank. A steady cooling could shape its future decisions on interest rates.
For now, the headline remains some way above its two percent target. Patience, not celebration, is the order of the day.
Germany — The Budget Gap
A Wide Hole To Close
Berlin’s cabinet moved to close a wide gap in its public budget. A plan to fill the hole was taking shape this week.
The chancellor has warned of a worsening downturn at home. The strain leaves the government little room to spend freely.
Reform Under Pressure
Closing the gap means hard choices on spending and revenue. Every euro saved is contested by one ministry or another.
The fiscal squeeze sits behind the welfare overhaul and the trade debate. Money, as ever, shapes what a government can actually do.
Poland — The Forecast Creeps Up
Pressure On A Strong Economy
Poland’s inflation outlook was nudged higher in recent forecasts. The move came even as its growth held among Europe’s strongest.
A resilient economy is finding price pressure harder to shake off. The energy shock has left its mark on the outlook.
Growth And Strain Together
Few European economies can match Poland’s pace of expansion. Yet rising prices and a wide deficit temper the good news.
The country is doing well and feeling the strain at the same time. Strong output does not by itself spare households the squeeze.
The Region — An Energy Reprieve
A Falling Oil Price
A falling oil price gave the continent’s big importers a reprieve. The cost of crude has slid as the Gulf has calmed.
It is carried here as a single neutral line, a matter of prices, not war. The relief lands across economies that buy energy abroad.
An Echo Still Lingers
The earlier energy shock still echoes in this month’s price figures. Its effects fade slowly rather than all at once.
For a continent watching inflation, even a small drop helps. It is the quiet good fortune beneath an uneven month.
The Read
The continent spent the day reading its month-end price figures and finding the relief uneven, and how each country fared told us much about its character. Relief, when it comes to a continent, rarely arrives all at once.
In Italy the figures eased and the everyday shopping basket grew lighter, while in Spain inflation held stubbornly firm and refused to loosen as it had across the border. In Germany the work was rewiring the welfare state and weighing a harder line on China, while in Poland the price outlook crept the wrong way even as growth held strong.
Beneath it all, a falling oil price eased one pressure on the continent, a small reprieve in an uneven month. The lesson of the day was a familiar one: relief from rising prices is uneven, and felt last by those who need it most.
What to Watch
Today · Italy’s month-end estimate shows inflation easing to about 3.0% as the shopping basket lightens
Today · Spain’s month-end estimate shows inflation holding stubbornly firm at about 3.2%
July 1 · Germany’s contested welfare overhaul for the long-term jobless takes effect
This week · Germany’s coalition weighs a harder line on trade toward Beijing
This week · Berlin’s cabinet moves to close a wide gap in its budget amid a downturn warning
Recent · Poland’s inflation forecast is nudged higher even as growth holds strong
Month-end · The Eurozone price picture shows easing spreading unevenly across the bloc
Today · A falling oil price eases costs for the continent’s energy importers
View original source — Rio Times ↗


