Consumer Prices, OECD – Updated: 2 December 2021

 

Inflation in the OECD area surges to 5.2% in October 2021, the highest rate in over two decades

 

Download the entire news release (graphs and table included – PDF)

2 Dec. 2021 – Inflation in the OECD area surged to 5.2% in the 12 months to October 2021, compared with 4.6% in September, and just 1.2% in October 2020, reaching the highest rate since February 1997. In the euro area, inflation picked up markedly to 4.1% in October, from 3.4% in September and minus 0.3% a year earlier. However, it remained lower than in the OECD area as a whole, particularly compared with the United States where year-on-year inflation climbed from 5.4% in September to 6.2% in October, the highest rate since November 1990.1

Over the year, energy prices soared by 24.2% in the OECD area, more than five percentage points higher than in September (18.9%) and the highest rate since July 1980. Food price inflation in the OECD area was stable at 4.5%. Excluding food and energy, OECD year-on-year inflation rose more moderately, to 3.5%, compared with 3.2% in September. 

Consumer prices, selected areas
October 2021, percentage change on the same period of the previous year, %

OECD Chart: Inflation (CPI), Total / Food / Energy / Total less food, less energy, Annual growth rate (%), Monthly, Apr 2020

 

OECD Chart: Inflation (CPI), Total / Food / Energy / Total less food, less energy, Annual growth rate (%), Monthly, Apr 2020

 Source: Consumer price indices, OECD

 

Energy (CPI) and Food (CPI), selected areas
October 2019 – October 2021, percentage change on the same period of the previous year, %

OECD Chart: Inflation (CPI), Food, Annual growth rate (%), Monthly, Apr 2019 – Apr 2020       “>OECD Chart: Inflation (CPI), Energy, Annual growth rate (%), Monthly, Apr 2019 – Apr 2020

 Source: Consumer price indices, OECD

 

Underlying data:  

 

 


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@OECD_STAT

 

 

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