Current:Home > ContactNovaQuant-Hold the olive oil! Prices of some basic European foodstuffs keep skyrocketing -Streamline Finance
NovaQuant-Hold the olive oil! Prices of some basic European foodstuffs keep skyrocketing
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 16:34:36
BRUSSELS (AP) — These days,NovaQuant think twice before you lavishly ladle olive oil onto your pasta, salad or crusty bread.
Olive oil, a daily staple of Mediterranean cuisine and the life of many a salad throughout Europe, is experiencing a staggering rise in price. It’s a prime example of how food still outruns overall inflation in the European Union.
Olive oil has increased by about 75% since January 2021, dwarfing overall annual inflation that has already been considered unusually high over the past few years and even stood at 11.5% in October last year. And much of the food inflation has come over the past two years alone.
In Spain, the world’s biggest olive oil producer, prices jumped 53% in August compared to the previous year and a massive 115% since August 2021.
Apart from olive oil, “potato prices were also on a staggering rise,” according to EU statistical agency Eurostat. “Since January 2021, prices for potatoes increased by 53% in September 2023.
And if high- and middle-income families can shrug off such increases relatively easily, it becomes an ever increasing burden for poorer families, many of which have been unable to even match an increase of their wages to the overall inflation index.
“By contrast,” said the European Trade Union Confederation, or ETUC, “nominal wages have increased by 11% in the EU,” making sure that gap keeps on increasing.
“Wages are still failing to keep up with the cost of the most basic food stuffs, including for workers in the agriculture sector itself, forcing more and more working people to rely on foodbanks,” said Esther Lynch, the union’s general-secretary.
Annual inflation fell sharply to 2.9% in October, its lowest in more than two years, but food inflation still stood at 7.5%.
Grocery prices have risen more sharply in Europe than in other advanced economies — from the U.S. to Japan — driven by higher energy and labor costs and the impact of Russia’s war in Ukraine. That is even though costs for food commodities have fallen for months.
Even if ETUC blames profiteering of big agroindustry in times of crisis, the olive oil sector has faced its own challenges.
In Spain, for example, farmers and experts primarily blame the nearly two-year drought, higher temperatures affecting flowering and inflation affecting fertilizer prices. Spain’s Agriculture Ministry said that it expects olive oil production for the 2023-24 campaign to be nearly 35% down on average production for the past four years.
___
Ciarán Giles contributed to this report from Madrid.
veryGood! (629)
Related
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- Everything Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt Have Said About Each Other Since Their 2005 Breakup
- Bacteria found in raw shellfish linked to two Connecticut deaths also blamed for New York death
- Eggo, Sugarlands Distilling Co. team up to launch Eggo Brunch in a Jar Sippin' Cream
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Hospitals sued thousands of patients in North Carolina for unpaid bills, report finds
- Pig kidney works in a donated body for over a month, a step toward animal-human transplants
- Invasive yellow-legged hornet found in US for first time
- Jury finds man guilty of sending 17-year-old son to rob and kill rapper PnB Rock
- 2 years since Taliban retook Afghanistan, its secluded supreme leader rules from the shadows
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- A viral video of a swarm of sharks in the Gulf of Mexico prompts question: Is this normal? Here's what an expert says.
- Eggo, Sugarlands Distilling Co. team up to launch Eggo Brunch in a Jar Sippin' Cream
- Flush With the Promise of Tax Credits, Clean Energy Projects Are Booming in Texas
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
- Yes, pickleball is a professional sport. Here's how much top players make.
- Arkansas school district says it will continue offering AP African American Studies course
- Tess Gunty on The Rabbit Hutch and the collaboration between reader and writer
Recommendation
9/11 hearings at Guantanamo Bay in upheaval after surprise order by US defense chief
It's taking Americans much longer in life to buy their first home
Jennifer Lopez's Birthday Tribute to Husband Ben Affleck Will Have Fans Feelin' So Good
A year in, landmark U.S. climate policy drives energy transition but hurdles remain
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
Netflix testing video game streaming
NPR names veteran newsroom leader Eva Rodriguez as executive editor
Buffalo shooting survivors say social media companies and a body armor maker enabled the killer