Current:Home > reviewsHold the olive oil! Prices of some basic European foodstuffs keep skyrocketing -AssetLink
Hold the olive oil! Prices of some basic European foodstuffs keep skyrocketing
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:40:31
BRUSSELS (AP) — These days, 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! (4)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Inflation and climate change tackled in new Senate deal that Biden calls 'historic'
- Amazon Shoppers Say These Best-Selling Cleaning Products Saved Them Time & Money
- Get an Instant Cheek Lift and Save $23 on the Viral Tarte Cosmetics Blush Tape and Glow Tape Duo
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Kerry Washington, LeBron James and More Send Messages to Jamie Foxx Amid Hospitalization
- Influencer Camila Coehlo Shares the Important Reason She Started Saying No
- Mississippi residents are preparing for possible river flooding
- Bodycam footage shows high
- North West Makes Surprise Appearance Onstage at Katy Perry Concert in Las Vegas
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- The Late Late Show With James Corden Shoots Down One Direction Reunion Rumors
- In a flood-ravaged Tennessee town, uncertainty hangs over the recovery
- These hurricane flood maps reveal the climate future for Miami, NYC and D.C.
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Why scientists have pumped a potent greenhouse gas into streams on public lands
- A Northern California wildfire has injured several people and destroyed homes
- Go Inside the Love Lives of Stranger Things Stars
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
From Acne to Eczema Flare Ups, This Is Why Stress Wreaks Havoc on Your Skin
A cataclysmic flood is coming for California. Climate change makes it more likely.
Floating in a rubber dinghy, a filmmaker documents the Indus River's water woes
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
PHOTOS: A third of Pakistan is under water in catastrophic floods
Everything Happening With the Stephen Smith Homicide Investigation Since the Murdaugh Murders
Insurances woes in coastal Louisiana make hurricane recovery difficult