Wages in the euro area grew at the weakest pace in almost six years, during the three months ended June, a signal that the common currency zone is struggling the odds of a muted economic recovery, a phase of worry for the policymakers at the European Central Bank (ECB).
Eurozone hourly wage costs rose 1.0 percent in the year to second quarter of 2016, a significant slowdown from the 1.6 percent recorded for the first quarter. The second-quarter data equaled the series’ low witnessed during 2013 and will reinforce ECB concerns surrounding second-round inflation effects.
Further, a significant slowdown was witnessed in the wages and salaries per hour component to 0.9 percent from 1.7 percent previously, while the non-wage component increased slightly to 1.4 percent from 1.5 percent previously. Labour costs rose 0.9 percent in the industry, 1.5 percent in construction and 0.9 percent in services.
Also, annual declines were observed in Italy, Finland and Luxembourg, according to the latest data released. Moreover, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands and Ireland registered weak readings in the core Eurozone economies, below 1 percent.
Although there was no significant reaction in asset prices, but comments from ECB officials will continue to be monitored closely in the short term. Meanwhile, inflationary pressures also remain subdued, with consumer prices hitting just 0.4 per cent last month, held back by falling energy costs.


FxWirePro: Daily Commodity Tracker - 21st March, 2022
Best Gold Stocks to Buy Now: AABB, GOLD, GDX
Oil Prices Hold Steady as Ukraine Tensions and Fed Cut Expectations Support Market
Japan’s Nikkei Drops as Markets Await Key U.S. Inflation Data
Gold Prices Fall Amid Rate Jitters; Copper Steady as China Stimulus Eyed
Fed Meeting Sparks Division as Markets Brace for Possible Rate Cut
IMF Deputy Dan Katz Visits China as Key Economic Review Nears
BOJ Governor Ueda Highlights Uncertainty Over Future Interest Rate Hikes
European Stocks Rise as Markets Await Key U.S. Inflation Data
Spain’s Industrial Output Records Steady Growth in October Amid Revised September Figures 



