Inflation in Denmark hasn’t peaked yet and it can presumably get worse as per the senior analyst at Danske Bank A/S, Bjorn Tangaa Sillemann’s note to clients. The country is still experiencing wage growth and there is demand abroad for Danish products, for the time being. Noteworthy is that although inflation has been steadily rising since 2021, it has accelerated in recent months as a result of the conflict in Ukraine, which has led to a knock-on effect on commodity and food prices.
Belt-tightening measures for all
Denmark outperformed their peers during the Pandemic lockdown, however, inflation is now being fueled by energy and wage pressure stemming from labor shortages. Electricity contributed a 1% rise in inflation and fuel added another 0.8% as per Statistic Denmark. The worst-case scenarios include raging inflation to above 5.5% levels spurred on by a loss of business confidence, worsening investment climate, and weakening of the consumers buying power. This would represent stagflation which could become a reality with oil and gas flows from Russia being tapered down by EU and partner countries. How inflationary pressure will affect the richest countries which have strong consumers is still an unknown. Poor countries whose household income is usually eaten up by groceries and utility bills will most certainly feel the inflationary squeeze. If energy prices come down there is a possibility to avoid worse case scenarios, and the entire world is hoping to avoid stagflation. Disclaimer: The content on this site should not be considered investment advice. Investing is speculative. When investing, your capital is at risk.