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A vendor speaks with a shopper at a fresh produce store in Madrid, Spain. File photo: BLOOMBERG/EMILIO PARRA DOIZTUA
A vendor speaks with a shopper at a fresh produce store in Madrid, Spain. File photo: BLOOMBERG/EMILIO PARRA DOIZTUA

Surging energy prices pushed Spanish inflation to a peak of just under 10% in March, the highest in the eurozone and nearly double the 5.3% in neighbouring Portugal e4ven though the two Iberian economies share a wholesale electricity market.

The disconnect lies in the way that energy prices are built into the headline Spanish inflation figure — a statistical quirk with real-economy consequences because of Spain’s widespread indexation of pensions, wages and rents. Following is a brief explanation of what is at stake.

How Spain’s consumer price index is calculated

Caixabank analysts flagged it first: the inflation index includes only regulated electricity contracts taken out at a variable rate tied to fluctuating wholesale market prices.

While such contracts used to be taken up by the bulk of consumers, in the last five years the proportion has dropped to just a third. Thus the majority of Spaniards are now in line with their Portuguese peers, 85% of whom are on fixed-term contracts offered by distributors. The problem is that the prices they pay are not counted in the Spanish inflation index.

How much does this distort CPI by?

Normally, fixed-tariff electricity customers would expect to pay a premium for the peace of mind of predictability over a term like three years. But now they are lucky in that they are shielded from the rises in wholesale prices linked to the Ukraine war. One senior government official estimated the official data may be overestimating Spain's real inflation by about two percentage points: indeed, the Spanish government sees average inflation at 6% this year while Portugal predicts 4% by the end of 2022.

Monthly data tell a similar story. As electricity market prices eased slightly, headline Spanish inflation fell in April from its March peak to 8.4%, compared to 7.2% in Portugal. Core inflation — excluding energy and fresh food prices — showed this gap was entirely determined by these volatile components: In April, core inflation in Spain reached 4.4% and in Portugal 5%.

What does an overestimated CPI mean for Spain?

According to calculations by economics think-tank Fedea, each percentage point rise in the CPI means an additional €1.7bn spent by the state to increase pensions, meaning the statistical anomaly could be costing Spain at least €3.4bn in public pensions alone. There are other knock-on effects: rents in Spain are indexed to inflation — though the government has suspended that for three months through to June — and the indicator is widely used as a guideline by unions and employers to negotiate wages.

How to solve it

Spain's INE statistics office has set to work to redo the inflation indicator by incorporating free-market prices, but the reform requires companies providing millions of pieces of data on a like-for-like basis and not all of them are co-operating in the same way.

“In order to adapt the CPI to truly reflect the price of electricity we need data from the electricity companies and we have been trying for months to get this detailed data,” economics minister Nadia Calvino said last week. “We need everyone to help.”

The Iberian countries are expected to approve this week a temporary Brussels-backed average cap on skyrocketing reference prices of natural gas and coal used in power plants, aiming to contain the rise in electricity prices in the regional wholesale market (MIBEL). Prices at which Spanish and Portuguese generators sell electricity in MIBEL are determined by the highest marginal cost of production, which is that of gas-fired power plants and coal power plants. This measure may help ease Spanish inflation a little, but it does not solve its statistical problem.

The Portuguese “electricity miracle”

In addition to this statistical mismatch, there is another factor explaining the much lower prices paid by the Portuguese in what some have dubbed their “electricity miracle”.

In Portugal the price regulated by the local watchdog, named ERSE, remains fixed throughout the year, though it can be revised quarterly, but to a limited extent. Portuguese consumers can also move freely between regulated tariffs and free-market tariffs, choosing whichever is the lowest. Furthermore, unlike Spain, the rise in regulated tariffs in Portugal is being contained because the fixed “feed-in tariffs” guaranteed to renewable energies — solar and wind — are much lower than the MIBEL electricity prices, and under the current price-setting formulas this lowers the system-wide tariffs set by ERSE. About 40% of Portuguese consumer’s energy bills — excluding taxes — with regulated tariffs is related to this renewable energy component.

Reuters

                           

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