In Europe’s relentless battle against inflation, another culprit has apparently emerged: Beyoncé.
This could explain some of the reason Sweden’s inflation rate was higher than expected in May.
Consumer prices in Sweden rose 9.7 percent last month from a year earlier, the country’s statistics agency, Statistics Sweden, said on Wednesday.
Michael Grahn, an economist at Danske Bank, said that the start of Beyoncé’s tour might have “colored” the inflation data.
“How much is uncertain,” he wrote on Twitter, but it could be responsible for most of the 0.3 percentage point that restaurant and hotel prices added to the monthly increase in inflation.
Persons:
Michael Grahn, ”
Organizations:
Statistics, Danske Bank, Twitter
Locations:
Stockholm, Sweden, Statistics Sweden