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    Home»World Economy»Europe’s Inflation Spiral Is Fueling The Depression Into 2028
    World Economy

    Europe’s Inflation Spiral Is Fueling The Depression Into 2028

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMay 5, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Eurozone inflation is accelerating again at the worst possible moment for Europe. Consumer prices rose 3% in April compared to 2.6% the previous month, driven primarily by surging energy costs tied to the Iran conflict and fears surrounding the Strait of Hormuz. Energy inflation alone jumped 10.9% year-over-year. At the same time, economic growth across the eurozone has nearly stalled.

    Europe now faces rising prices alongside weakening economic activity, and that combination becomes extraordinarily difficult for central banks to manage. The European Central Bank is trapped. If it raises rates aggressively, it risks crushing already fragile economies. If it eases policy too quickly, inflation accelerates further as higher energy costs spread through the system.

    The real issue is that Europe constructed an economic framework completely dependent on stability. Cheap Russian energy, low interest rates, globalization, and endless debt expansion became the foundation supporting the European model. Once those pillars started cracking, the weaknesses underneath became impossible to hide.

    Germany is already paying the price. Its industrial sector has been steadily weakening under high electricity prices and declining export competitiveness. Major manufacturers have reduced operations or shifted investment outside Europe because production costs no longer make economic sense. Heavy industry cannot survive indefinitely when energy becomes a luxury good.

    France is stagnating economically while debt continues climbing. Britain’s retail sector just recorded its worst collapse in over 40 years. Across southern Europe, younger generations remain trapped between weak job markets and rising living costs. The political class continues promising climate transitions, military expansion, social spending, and migration support simultaneously while economic growth disappears underneath them.

    Oil markets reacted immediately to the Middle East conflict because roughly 20% of global oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Even temporary disruptions create ripple effects throughout Europe’s economy. Transportation costs rise first, followed by food, manufacturing, chemicals, agriculture, shipping, and consumer goods. Inflation then spreads outward into virtually every category of daily life.

    The ECB cannot solve a geopolitical energy crisis with monetary policy. That is what policymakers still fail to understand. Europe spent years shutting nuclear plants, discouraging domestic production, restricting fossil fuel investment, and relying on unstable foreign supply chains. The continent deliberately reduced its own resilience. Once war entered the equation, the vulnerabilities became obvious.

    Consumers are now being squeezed from every direction. Mortgage costs remain elevated compared to the zero-rate era. Utility bills continue rising. Food inflation remains persistent. Business investment is slowing as uncertainty spreads. Retail sales are collapsing because households are being forced to prioritize essentials over discretionary spending.

    This is precisely why the ECM projected Europe entering a depressionary phase into 2028.

    A depression is not always a dramatic overnight crash. Sometimes it unfolds as a long erosion of living standards, industrial capacity, and public confidence. Europe is entering that process now. Governments borrow more while growth weakens. Private investment retreats. Capital leaves the region searching for safety and opportunity elsewhere. Political fragmentation intensifies because the middle class becomes increasingly squeezed.

    The inflation spike tied to the Iran war is exposing how fragile Europe had already become underneath the surface. The continent entered this geopolitical crisis economically weakened, overregulated, energy dependent, and burdened by unsustainable sovereign debt. The ECM warned this period would become the turning point. Europe is now moving directly into that cycle.



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