Inflation holds at 3.3%, and energy is still calling the shots
Portugal's inflation stayed at 3.3% in May, with energy up 13.1%. The Bank of Portugal warns of weaker real incomes.
Inflation isn’t running away, but it isn’t letting go either. In May, prices rose 3.3% year on year, the same pace as the month before and the highest since September 2023. The main culprit has a name: energy, up 13.1%, driven by the Middle East war and tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.
There is a calmer note, though. Core inflation, which strips out energy and unprocessed food, held at 2.2% for the second month running. Services, meanwhile, ticked up slightly, from 3.2% to 3.4%.
The Bank of Portugal’s warning
In its June Economic Bulletin, the Bank of Portugal underlines the obvious but uncomfortable point: this temporary rise in prices eats into real income growth this year. In plain terms, even with wages rising, purchasing power feels the squeeze.
For households, the practical takeaway is to budget with room to spare: energy remains the most unpredictable variable, and while Hormuz stays tense, that’s where the shocks come from.
See also: the ship hit in Hormuz and the ECB’s rate hike. Official data at the Bank of Portugal and INE.
Image: Wikimedia Commons