WSJE(5/28) Germans Turn Sour On Euro Amid Higher Prices (Europe cheats on inflation as the US ) By G. Thomas Sims FRANKFURT -- Nearly five months after Germans obediently traded in their beloved marks for euros with hardly a peep, the citizens of Europe's most populous country are souring on the new currency. The reason: growing evidence that shops, restaurants and taxis jacked up prices when converting to the new currency on Jan. 1. Many of these businesses blame the price increases on other factors, such as rising food and energy costs. Consumers blame the euro. Data published Monday gave hope that inflation will continue to ease in the future. Still, the outcry has become so loud that the German government, in the middle of election year, can no longer ignore it. On Friday, Germany's consumer minister, Renate Kuenast, will sit down with retailers, restaurateurs, employers, unions and consumer-protection agencies. Germans even invented a word for the phenomenon: "teuro." It is a play on "euro" and the German for "expensive," teuer. The term has become so become so widespread in the media that Matthias Wermke, chief editor of the Duden dictionary, says that the nation's premier lexicon will consider adding the new word in the next edition. Officials say the euro-related price increases are the one hitch in an otherwise smooth cash changeover, a huge logistical challenge involving 300 million people in 12 European countries. Germans are complaining more than their neighbors, perhaps because the stable mark and its association with the German Wirtschaftswunder, or "economic miracle," meant the euro was never terribly popular to begin with. Germans swallowed it with surprisingly little resistance earlier this year, but a recent survey by the respected Allensbach institute shows that 54% of Germans would like to reinstate the mark. Germans have lower tolerance for inflation than other euro-zone countries. During the mid 1990s, inflation rates in Greece were typically above 8% and in Italy above 5%, compared with just above 1% in Germany. The debate is coming at a bad time, when the euro-skeptical Sweden and U.K. are considering whether they should also adopt the euro. Politicians and other officials are having a hard time convincing the public that the euro, the symbol of European integration, is not entirely to blame for the higher prices. The chief economist of the European Central Bank, the manager of the new currency, told an audience of lawyers and economists in Essen last week that overall the euro has had little effect on prices. "I can see from the look in your faces that you don't believe me. My wife doesn't believe me either," the ECB economist Otmar Issing said. Wim Duisenberg, the bank's president, admitted to a "problem of perception," noting that many prices have dropped. But he also said the "process" of using the euro to increase prices "may still be going on" in some sectors. One larger implication of the inflation fears is that they make Germans less willing to spend, bad news for an economy just emerging from a recession even though business confidence is on the rise again, according to new figures on Monday. Hans-Joachim Koerber, the chairman of Metro AG, said last week that Germany's largest retailer is getting hit by the belief that the euro caused prices to rise, though he says the store didn't hike any prices when the cash was introduced. Some shops are once again showing prices in marks to reassure customers. Schaffrath, a big furniture store in Duesseldorf, only printed euro prices beginning Jan. 1. The shop found that customers were perplexed. The store has since reverted to showing prices in both euros and marks. Frank Phlipsen, manager of marketing, says the company has no plans to go back to pure euro pricing. No matter what company officials say, prices did go up initially. German consumer prices were falling, or at least staying steady, from month to month during the second half of last year before the cash introduction. But in January, prices rose 0.9% from December. Since then, the month-on-month rate has steadily declined to around 0.1% in May from April. Some sectors were affected more greatly than others. Food prices rose 3% in January from December, though they are now declining again. Service costs also rose 0.7% in January and February, after falling for seven out of 12 months last year. It is difficult to tell exactly what is behind the price increases. The consumer-protection agencies of three German states -- Baden-Wuerttemberg, Brandenburg and North Rhine Westphalia -- have registered some 1,700 complaints so far, but companies tend to deny the euro played a role. Consider, though, one of Germany's most popular fast foods: the Turkish kebab. The price for an Iskender Kebab at the Antalya Grill in Bielefeld rose overnight from 12 marks to seven euros, a price increase of 14%. The Turkish restaurant admits to raising prices on Jan. 1, but says it has nothing to do with the euro. The managers say rent has risen 20% since it last raised prices in 1995, and some products such as lettuce are now twice as expensive. Elsewhere, parking for nonguests at the Novotel Offenbach outside Frankfurt rose from 12 marks to 10 euros, a 63% price increase. The hotel denies the euro played a role. Instead it wanted to "motivate" nonguests "to park elsewhere because they are blocking our urgently needed capacity for customers." The early-bird price at the Therme Erding swimming complex in Erding rose from 13 marks to 7.50 euros, a price increase of 16%. Therme Erding admitted that "it is correct that not all of our prices at the turn of the year were converted from marks to euros neutrally." The pool made "enormous" investments since opening 2.5 years ago, and costs for energy have increased 30%, it said. (END) Dow Jones Newswires 28-05-02 0430GMT |