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Energy price developments in and out of the COVID-19 pandemic – from commodity prices to consumer prices

Friderike Kuik, Jakob Adolfsen, Aidan Meyler and Eliza Lis

Economic Bulletin Articles, 2022, vol. 4

Abstract: Record-high energy price increases at the end of 2021 and beginning of 2022 put significant pressures on the purchasing power of consumers. These increases followed a marked decline in energy prices at the onset of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. While the initial increase in energy prices from the summer of 2020 was mainly driven by the recovery in energy demand following the easing of lockdown measures after the first wave of the pandemic, the subsequent price rally during 2021 was also significantly affected by supply-side issues. This development was aggravated in early 2022 by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The increase in European gas prices since the summer of 2021 has been particularly sharp, reflecting a combination of supply and demand factors that left European gas inventories at historically low levels ahead of the winter season and the gas market vulnerable to supply and demand uncertainty, including from escalating geopolitical tensions. As a result, consumer gas prices and consumer electricity prices (driven by gas prices) played an increasingly important role in developments in HICP energy and were also accompanied by unprecedented cross-country heterogeneity in energy price developments. JEL Classification: Q43, E31, Q02, L90

Keywords: Covid-19 pandemic; electricity; Energy; gas; inflation; oil (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022-06
Note: 496790
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (11)

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