
As Iran’s Food Inflation Hits Records, Sweden’s Tax Cut Slashes Prices
From record cooking-oil costs in Tehran to falling dairy prices in Stockholm, May inflation data reveals a world of stark contrasts, driven by weather, currency crises and fiscal choices.
Inflation figures released across four continents this week paint a fractured picture of global food costs, with Iran registering a half-century inflation record while Sweden recorded its sharpest grocery price drop in memory following a bold tax cut. Iranian economists say the overall inflation rate has reached levels unseen in fifty years, with edible oil prices—90 per cent dependent on imports—surging twentyfold over five years. Two currency shocks, most recently a devaluation decision late last year, have pushed food inflation far beyond the headline rate, intensifying pressure on households already battered by sanctions.
Latin America is grappling with its own distinct but similarly persistent food price pressures. In Colombia, annual food inflation hit 6 per cent in May, driven by a 14.8 per cent jump in perishable goods after first heavy rains and then drought slashed harvests. More troubling for the Banco de la República, core inflation—which strips out food and fuel—edged up to 5.98 per cent, suggesting price gains are no longer confined to climate-hit goods. Argentina’s national statistics agency, meanwhile, reported that a typical family of four needed nearly 1.5 million pesos to stay above the poverty line, a 2 per cent monthly increase that trailed headline inflation only slightly, underscoring how deeply food costs are eroding purchasing power even when subsidies and price controls are in place.
In Asia, India’s retail inflation climbed to 3.93 per cent in May, a 15-month high, as food inflation accelerated to 4.78 per cent and transport costs for goods surged by 7.63 per cent, signalling that producers are finally passing on higher fuel and logistics expenses. The impending release of a new wholesale price index and the country’s first producer price index is expected to reveal how much cost pressure remains bottled up upstream. Tehran, facing a far more acute strain, is contending with an inflation psychology that has doubled price growth in just five months, according to local reports, as memories of the 2022 subsidy reform—when cooking oil tripled in price overnight—fuse with fresh currency turmoil.
The exception to this global squeeze sits in Scandinavia. Swedish pensioners’ association PRO documented a fall of more than 6 per cent in a standard basket of groceries over the past six months, with dairy, oranges and juices leading the decline. The catalyst was a government decision on 1 April to halve the value-added tax on food from 12 to 6 per cent. Retailers appear to have passed the cut on swiftly, though PRO warns that price gaps between chains remain wide. Whether such fiscal relief can be sustained or replicated elsewhere is uncertain, but for now it stands as a rare counterpoint to a world where weather, war and currency weakness are combining to keep food inflation stubbornly high for billions.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Sweden has seen a clear fall in food prices after the VAT on food was cut from 12 to 6 percent in April. A pensioners' basket shrank over six percent in a year, although large price differences persist between parts of the country.
Across Latin America, food inflation is pushing upward, driven by drought, heavy rains, and supply gaps. In Argentina a family of four needed close to 1.5 million pesos in May just to stay above the poverty line, while Colombia’s core inflation climbed back to 6 percent, raising doubts about the central bank's rate policy.
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