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Business Briefing
In January 2026, annual inflation in the euro area decreased to 1.7%, down from 2.0% in December 2025, a notable shift that hints at easing cost pressures within households. However, beneath the headline figures, a diverse inflation landscape emerges; for instance, Romania and Slovakia reported significantly higher rates at 8.5% and 4.3%, respectively. This disparity signals potential challenges in achieving cohesive monetary stability across the bloc, as elevated inflation in certain member states could affect overall policy effectiveness. As the euro area adapts to these variances, the broader implications for economic cohesion in the region warrant careful observation.
This morning, Eurostat reported that annual inflation in the euro area is anticipated to decline to 1.7% in January 2026, down from 2.0% in December. Key components such as services and food show varied inflation rates compared to last month.
This morning, Eurostat released flash estimates indicating a 0.3% increase in GDP for both the euro area and the EU in Q4 2025. Year-on-year growth stands at 1.3% for the euro area and 1.5% for the EU. Employment rose by 0.2% in the same quarter.
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Job losses will restrain price pressures, says BoE rate-setter The FT says companies will struggle…
This week’s The Economist reports on “pig-butchering”, the most lucrative scam in a global industry that steals over $500bn a year from victims all around the world.
The FT leads with China’s retaliatory tariffs on the US, which the paper says could set off a “trade war” between the two nations.
The Economist says IN HIS OWN inimitable style, President Donald Trump has identified something he…
The Financial Times says the Bank of England has halved its growth forecast, with a…
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