Inflation steady at 3.3% — but energy is still burning
Overall prices didn't budge in May, yet energy jumped 13.1% over the year. The war and the Strait of Hormuz explain a big chunk of the bill.
Portuguese inflation held at 3.3% in May — exactly the same as April. At first glance, that reads as stability. Look inside the numbers and the story gets spicier.
Energy accelerated to a 13.1% year-on-year rise (up from 11.7% in April), driven by the war in the Middle East and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. On the other side of the scales, unprocessed food slowed to 5.7% (down from 7.4%), which helped balance the books. Core inflation — stripping out energy and fresh food — stayed at 2.2%.
The takeaway
The good part: the “hard core” of prices is under control, close to target. The annoying part: energy is still the stone in the shoe, and it lands squarely on household and business budgets. If the US–Iran truce holds and oil calms down, energy is probably the line most likely to ease first. Until then, it’s worth giving your electricity bill a long, hard look.
Illustrative · Photo: Markus Winkler / Pexels