Euro zone consumers in for a shock as power bills soar
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[January 18, 2022] By
Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - When Christian Hurtz
opened his electricity bill just before New Year, his jaw dropped: it
had more than trebled from the rate he signed up for.
The 41-year-old software developer from Cologne, Germany, is one of
millions of Europeans who have seen their energy costs balloon as
providers go out of business because of soaring gas prices or pass them
on to customers.
Spending more on heating, lighting or running a car is straining many
households' budgets and shaking expectations that a consumer-led
economic boom will follow pandemic-era restraint.
"At first I thought that was the amount for three months," said Hurtz,
whose bill came from the provider of last resort after his own energy
company stopped supplying.
"When I realised they wanted it every single month, my jaw dropped. It
spoiled my Christmas break a bit," he told Reuters.
In 2020, euro zone households spent an average of 1,200 euros on
electricity and gas. That figure is set to swell to 1,850 euros this
year, according to analysts at BofA, as geopolitical tensions push up
natural gas prices which the scarce supply of energy from renewable
sources cannot offset.
Hurtz and hundreds of thousands of other customers of private energy
firms that went out of business or stopped supply last year - including
39 in Germany alone - have found themselves paying two or three times
the rates they thought they had secured.
Graphic: Feeling the heat yet?-
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CONSUMER BOOM?
This year was meant to see consumer spending drive growth after two
years of COVID-19 lockdowns and layoffs.
The European Central Bank said in December it expected the euro zone
economy to expand by 4.2% in 2022, driven by a 5.9% surge in private
consumption.
But higher energy costs hitting households at home and at the petrol
pump - with oil rising by half and wholesale prices for natural gas
quadrupling in a year - are throwing those forecasts into question.
Energy typically accounts for slightly more than 6% of private
consumption in the euro zone but this could rise to 8-10% as a result of
higher prices, according to ING's estimates, reducing what is available
to spend on other goods.
"This would also be in line with previous episodes of higher energy
prices, in which almost all countries saw other expenditures dropping,"
ING's economist Carsten Brzeski said.
The hit to growth is likely to be significant.
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A gas meter is pictured in the cellar of a home in Bad Honnef, near
Bonn, Germany, January 4, 2022 as energy costs in the EU reach new
levels. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay//File Photo
In Italy, for example, gas and electricity prices will shave 2.9% off household
consumption this year and 1.1% off GDP if they stay close to their current
levels, according to consultancy firm Nomisma Energia.
"The weakness of Italian consumption has always been one of the main impediments
for stronger GDP growth and 2022 levels will further worsen the problems,"
Nomisma Energia's chairman Davide Tabarelli said.
The picture is even more severe in Spain, where economists at BBVA put the hit
to growth at 1.4% for this year in estimates published in December and based on
market prices that are below current levels.
"If price increases come from higher demand, they are less damaging," Miguel
Cardoso of BBVA Research said. "The current situation is not like that. We are
seeing a negative supply shock."
In Germany, the RWI Institute estimated consumer spending would probably not
exceed pre-crisis levels again until the second quarter of 2022 and said rising
prices were likely to deter people from making major purchases.
France was a partial exception as the government of President Emmanuel Macron,
who is seeking re-election in May, has capped electricity price increases at 4%.
Other governments too are taking steps
https://www.reuters.com/business/
energy/
german-finance-minister-promises-support-high-energy-prices-2022-01-06/#:~:text=German%20finance%20minister%20promises%20support%20for%20high%20energy%20prices,-Reuters&text=BERLIN%2C%20Jan%206%20(Reuters),people%20for%20higher%20energy%20prices
ranging from cutting taxes
https://www.reuters.com/markets/
europe/
energy-costs-push-spanish-industrial-prices-new-
record-high-november-2021-12-22 on energy to giving subsidies to poorer
households
https://www.reuters.com/markets/
commodities/
greece-extends-energy-financial-
relief-into-january-2022-01-07.
But these will offset only about a quarter of the 54% increase in energy bills
from 2020, according to BofA estimates.
Some people have already started tightening their belts.
"One must really cut down," Hurtz said. "It's come to the point when one needs
to wonder if they can still afford that cheese or if they should buy one from
the lower shelf."
(Additional reporting by Gavin Jones in Rome, Belen Carreno in Madrid, Rene
Wagner in Berlin, Leigh Thomas in Paris, Angeliki Kotantou in Athens, Stephen
Jewkes in Milan, Bart Meijer in Amsterdam and Nina Chestney in London; Editing
by Catherine Evans)
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