Slovenia’s annual producer inflation rose to 1.9% in January 2026 from 1.1% in each of the previous two months. This marked the highest level since August 2023, driven by rising prices in mining and quarrying (9.6% vs 7.6% in December) and manufacturing (2.0% vs 1.5%). Meanwhile, costs for electricity, gas, steam, and air-conditioning supply continued to drop, albeit at a softer rate (-2.6% vs -9.4%). Inflation for water supply also eased (5.0% vs 5.4%). On a monthly basis, producer prices increased by 0.4% in January, following a 0.1% rise in December.
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Slovenia Producer Inflation Hits Over 2-Year High
Slovenia’s annual producer inflation rose to 1.9% in January 2026 from 1.1% in each of the previous two months. This marked the highest level since August 2023, driven by rising prices in mining and quarrying (9.6% vs 7.6% in December) and manufacturing (2.0% vs 1.5%). Meanwhile, costs for electricity, gas, steam, and air-conditioning supply continued to drop, albeit at a softer rate (-2.6% vs -9.4%). Inflation for water supply also eased (5.0% vs 5.4%). On a monthly basis, producer prices increased by 0.4% in January, following a 0.1% rise in December.