Resume af teksten:
Italiensk inflation steg til 2,8% i april sammenlignet med året før, efter at være 1,7% i marts. Dette skyldes primært højere priser på energi og friske fødevarer. Regulerede energipriser steg med 5,7%, mens ikke-regulerede energipriser gik op med 9,9%. Priser på friske fødevarer steg med 6%. Samtidig faldt core inflation, som udelukker energi og friske fødevarer, til 1,6% fra 2,1% i marts. Dette afspejler en mangel på sekundære inflationseffekter. Tjenesteinflationen aftog til 2,4% fra 2,8% i marts, delvist på grund af langsommere lønvækst. Trods stigende prisintentioner blandt serviceudbydere forventes headline inflation snart at overstige 3% på grund af stigende energipriser.
Fra ING:
This was widely expected, notwithstanding the temporary reduction in fuel excise duties. The temporary absence of second round effects will not prevent headline inflation from breaking the 3% threshold very soon

Italian inflation rose 2.8% on the year in April
After a subdued reading in March, possibly helped by the fading impact of February’s Winter Olympics, Italian inflation accelerated in April, increasingly reflecting the impact of the war in the Middle East on oil and gas prices.
According to Istat, the CPI was up 2.8% on the year (from 1.7% in March), mainly driven by strongly accelerating prices in regulated (up 5.7% from -1.6%) and non-regulated (up 9.9% from -2%) energy goods and fresh food (up 6% from 4.7%) which outweighed the price deceleration in recreational (down to 2.6% from 3%) and transport services (down to 0.5% from 2.2%).
Interestingly, core inflation, which excludes energy and fresh food, declined to 1.6% (from 2.1% in March), signalling the absence, for the time being, of second round effects. The decline in the core measure was very much a services story. Services inflation slowed to 2.4% (from 2.8% in March). Is such a pattern likely to last? While the slowdown in services inflation might have been distorted by the timing of the Easter holidays, the deceleration in wage growth – a key engine of services inflation – to 2.4% (from 2.7%) in March suggests that a reversal might not be imminent. To be sure, the April business survey showed increasing pricing intentions among service providers; yet, this could take some time, particularly if demand cools down.
Overall, the inflation picture is evolving largely as expected, with energy prices likely to push headline inflation above the 3% threshold very soon. The timing of any pick‑up in core inflation will depend crucially on developments in the Middle East.
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