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Central banks around the world lower the loan costs as worldwide inflation has been reached in many countries in many countries in recent years.
The FT Global Inflation and Rentety Tracker offers a regularly updated visual story of the inflation of the consumer prize and the policy rates of the Central Bank around the world.
This page includes the factors that influence the decisions of policy makers about loan costs and whether central banks have increased or reduced interest rates.
Higher loan costs have contributed to illuminating the rapid pace of the price growth that the world has swept during the pandemic.
Although inflation has fallen from its peak in most countries, many policy makers have warned that the last stage of the trip to the goal of the central banks – which is 2 percent in most advanced economies – will be the most difficult.
You can use this page to control inflation and interest rates in most individual countries.
This page also follows measures that are closely checked for signs of how inflation and policy percentages can evolve in the coming months.
The latest figures for the world’s largest economies show that inflation in some countries remains increased, with the exception of food and energy, an important measure of underlying price pressure.
Wholesale energy costs offer a timely measure for the price pressure that consumers can experience in the coming months.
An increase in energy prices was the most important motivation of inflation in many countries in recent years, but the gas and electricity costs have been withdrawn from their peaks during the energy crisis that followed the full invasion of Russia in Ukraine.
This page also follows the proceeds of 2-year returns on the government bonds, which are strongly influenced by market expectations of interest rates at the time.
The costs of houses rose in many countries during the pandemic, but high mortgage interest rates have led to a delay in house price growth in a number of countries.

