The vendor will provide customer changes at a food stall at the Farmers Market in Hanau, Germany on Saturday, August 9, 2025.
Alex Klaus | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The rise in unemployment and inflation overturn the outlook for Europe’s biggest economy. This adds to the wider EU bloc due to the full impact of newly implemented US tariffs.
Germany’s inflation rate rose 2.1% more than expected in August, with preliminary data showing expectations of 2% of analysts voted by Reuters on Friday. Inflation, comparably harmonious across the Eurozone, rose in July by a cooler than expected 1.8%.
Germany’s core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, was no different from the previous month to August, according to Destatis, the national statistics bureau.
The yield on German government bonds, known as the band, was hardly changed shortly after the data release. This came on the same day that Labor Bureau figures showed that the number of unemployed people jumped to a 6.4% rate in August.
The broader eurozone inflation measurements scheduled for Tuesday provide more insight into the economic impact of US President Donald Trump’s tariff policy, which has been hit by various European sectors in recent months.
The US and the EU attacked the trade agreement in July, which included a 15% tariff rate for many EU goods exported to the US, announced earlier this month.
Tariffs are widely expected to increase prices in the US, but the impact on costs elsewhere is less clear.
Germany’s highly export-driven economy has long been hovered near the flatline. According to the latest data from Destatis, the country’s gross domestic product expanded by 0.3% in the first quarter and contracted 0.3% for the next period.
“We still don’t know how European and US companies will respond to US tariffs. In one scenario, we can see prices falling in the eurozone due to US overcapacity and lower sales, but globally operated companies could actually try to raise prices in Europe to offset US interests.”
“A rather domestic theme is cooling the German labour market, which should take away wage pressure and, as a result, inflationary pressure,” he added, saying German inflation hikes are weakening the European Central Bank incident, pushing for interest rate cuts at its September meeting.
The ECB recently chose not to change the key rate at 2% during its July meeting.