Europe's largest economy was seen paying a high price for its
reliance on Russian gas, whose price has soared since Russia
attacked Ukraine last month in what it calls a "special military
operation".
"This should dampen household consumption and production in
energy-intensive industries," the German central bank said in
its monthly report.
It estimated the German economy likely stagnated in the first
three months of the year and the rebound it had pencilled in for
the second quarter would now be weaker than expected due to
"foreseeable impairments in foreign trade and increased
uncertainty".
Inflation, which hit its highest rate in almost 30 years at 5.1%
last month even before the latest surge in fuel prices, was now
set to rise further.
"The price of food and industrial goods should get a further
boost from the fall in wheat exports from Ukraine and Russia and
new disruptions to supply chain," the Bundesbank added.
(Reporting by Francesco Canepa, editing by Ed Osmond)
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