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Germany Inflation Rate

The inflation rate in Germany was last reported at 1.20 percent in July of 2010. From 1992 until 2010, the average inflation rate in Germany was 1.90 percent reaching an historical high of 6.40 percent in May of 1992 and a record low of -0.40 percent in July of 2009. Inflation rate refers to a general rise in prices measured against a standard level of purchasing power. The most well known measures of Inflation are the CPI which measures consumer prices, and the GDP deflator, which measures inflation in the whole of the domestic economy. This page includes: Germany Inflation Rate chart, historical data and news.


CountryInterest RateGrowth RateInflation RateJobless RateCurrent AccountExchange Rate
Germany 1.00%2.20%1.20%7.60%21.3280


  to        

Germany Inflation Rate 7/31/2010 1.2 6/30/2010 0.8 5/31/2010 1.2 4/30/2010 1.3 3/31/2010 1.1 2/28/2010 0.4 1/31/2010 0.7 12/31/2009 0.8 11/30/2009 0.4 10/31/2009 0 9/30/2009 -0.3 8/31/2009 0 7/31/2009 -0.4 6/30/2009 0.2 5/31/2009 0.1 4/30/2009 0.5 3/31/2009 0.5 2/28/2009 1.1 1/31/2009 0.9 12/31/2008 1.1 11/30/2008 1.3 10/31/2008 2.4 9/30/2008 3 8/31/2008 3.1 7/31/2008 3.3 6/30/2008 3.2 5/31/2008 3 4/30/2008 2.6 3/31/2008 3 2/29/2008 2.8 1/31/2008 2.9 7/31/2010 1.2 6/30/2010 0.8 5/31/2010 1.2 4/30/2010 1.3 3/31/2010 1.1 2/28/2010 0.4 1/31/2010 0.7 12/31/2009 0.8 11/30/2009 0.4 10/31/2009 0 9/30/2009 -0.3 8/31/2009 0 7/31/2009 -0.4 6/30/2009 0.2 5/31/2009 0.1 4/30/2009 0.5 3/31/2009 0.5 2/28/2009 1.1 1/31/2009 0.9 12/31/2008 1.1 11/30/2008 1.3 10/31/2008 2.4 9/30/2008 3 8/31/2008 3.1 7/31/2008 3.3 6/30/2008 3.2 5/31/2008 3 4/30/2008 2.6 3/31/2008 3 2/29/2008 2.8 1/31/2008 2.9

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
20100.700.401.101.301.200.801.20     
20090.901.100.500.500.100.20-0.400.00-0.300.000.400.80
20082.902.803.002.603.003.203.303.103.002.401.301.10
* The table above displays the monthly average.





Global Economics

Australia Extends Rate Pause
Published: 9/7/2010 12:39:14 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, RBA
Australia’s central bank extended its pause in raising interest rates “for the time being” as concern that the global economic recovery may falter trumped evidence of an accelerating expansion at home.

Brazilian Growth Outstrips Forecast
Published: 9/6/2010 11:06:43 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Brazil’s economy grew at an annualised rate of 8.9 per cent in the first half of 2010, defying expectations of a more significant slowdown in the second quarter and signalling that the country may beat its previous forecast of 7 per cent growth for the year.

Swiss Inflation Slowed Fourth Straight Month in August
Published: 9/5/2010 10:25:03 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Swiss inflation slowed for a fourth straight month in August, giving the central bank room to keep borrowing costs near zero.

ECB Leaves Interest Rates on Hold for 16th Month
Published: 9/5/2010 10:22:37 PM By: TradingEconomics.com
The European Central Bank has left interest rates at 1 percent for the 16th consecutive month as a still-uncertain global outlook clouds optimism about the eurozone's recovery.

Swiss Economy Expanded 0.9% in Q2
Published: 9/5/2010 6:50:37 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Switzerland’s economy expanded at a faster pace than economists forecast in the second quarter as companies stepped up spending to meet global demand.

Euro Area Unemployment Rate Remains Stable at 10.0% in July
Published: 9/5/2010 6:16:40 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Eurostat
The euro area (EA16) seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate was 10.0% in July 2010, unchanged compared with June. It was 9.6% in July 2009.

Euro Area Inflation Slows to 1.6%
Published: 9/5/2010 6:07:23 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Euro Area consumer prices rose 1.6 percent from a year earlier after increasing 1.7 percent in July, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said.

Australia Reports Trade Surplus of $1.71 Billion in July
Published: 9/5/2010 3:31:41 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bloomberg
Australia’s trade surplus narrowed by more than economists forecast in July as exports of coal and iron ore fell, while imports rose.

Canadian Growth Slowed in Second Quarter
Published: 9/5/2010 2:10:39 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, WSJ
The Canadian economy in the second quarter expanded at less than half the pace set in the first three months of the year, undercutting economists’ expectations and raising questions about whether the country’s central bank will tighten interest rates next week.

India’s Second Quarter GDP Rises To 8.8%
Published: 9/5/2010 1:59:44 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, MarketWatch
India's economy expanded 8.8% in the second quarter from a year earlier, compared to an 8.6% on-year expansion in the first, lifted by robust activity in manufacturing.




Inflation Rate Definition

In mainstream economics, the word “inflation” refers to a general rise in prices measured against a standard level of purchasing power. Previously the term was used to refer to an increase in the money supply, which is now referred to as expansionary monetary policy or monetary inflation. Inflation is measured by comparing two sets of goods at two points in time, and computing the increase in cost not reflected by an increase in quality. There are, therefore, many measures of inflation depending on the specific circumstances.

The most well known are the CPI which measures consumer prices, and the GDP deflator, which measures inflation in the whole of the domestic economy.The prevailing view in mainstream economics is that inflation is caused by the interaction of the supply of money with output and interest rates. Mainstream economist views can be broadly divided into two camps: the "monetarists" who believe that monetary effects dominate all others in setting the rate of inflation, and the "Keynesians" who believe that the interaction of money, interest and output dominate over other effects. Other theories, such as those of the Austrian school of economics, believe that an inflation of overall prices is a result from an increase in the supply of money by central banking authorities.

Related concepts include: deflation, a general falling level of prices; disinflation, the reduction of the rate of inflation; hyper-inflation, an out-of-control inflationary spiral; stagflation, a combination of inflation and poor economic growth; and reflation, which is an attempt to raise prices to counteract deflationary pressures(source: wikipedia).

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