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Beyoncé blamed for keeping inflation high in Sweden. Is Springsteen next?

Beyoncé blamed for keeping inflation high in Sweden. Is Springsteen next?
And if it's *** swifty summer for you, you should know Taylor isn't the only high profile act with the major tour compile the list of the top 10 most in demand concerts this summer, the site ranked the tours based off cumulative ticket sales as of today for concerts taking place between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Well, the top spot is Taylor Swift with tickets for her era tour selling for an average $920 each second is Beyonce with an average of $322. 3rd is last night singer Morgan Whelan with an average ticket price of 370. So, while it's higher than Beyonce's Beyonce's, excuse me, one is 27 tour dates compared to her 42 dates and Bruce Springsteen and cold play, they run out number four and five on the list summer concert.
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Beyoncé blamed for keeping inflation high in Sweden. Is Springsteen next?
Swedish consumers now have Beyoncé to blame for their bills, bills, bills.Video above: StubHub ranks most in-demand summer concertsThe chief economist at Danske Bank, the biggest bank in neighboring Denmark, said Wednesday that the singer’s decision to kick off her “Renaissance” world tour in Stockholm last month led to a surge in hotel and restaurant prices in the area as tens of thousands of fans descended on the city. Michael Grahn estimated that the extra demand from Beyoncé’s fans, known collectively as the BeyHive, was behind two-thirds of the price rises seen in the hospitality sector in May. That, in turn, contributed to a more modest decline in overall inflation than had been expected. Annual consumer price inflation eased to 9.7% in May from 10.5% the previous month, official statistics show, while economists polled by Reuters had predicted a sharper slowdown to 9.4%. “ definitely not normal,” Grahn told CNN. “Stars come here all the time, we seldom see effects like this.” Grahn said many fans had traveled to Sweden for the two sold-out concerts in the country as tickets were relatively cheaper than elsewhere and a “very weak” Swedish currency boosted their spending power. Some of Beyoncé’s U.S. fans told BuzzFeed News in February that they had snapped up tickets for the singer’s Swedish concerts at a huge discount to her U.S. shows. Grahn noted that “there are a limited number of hotels and accommodation in the Stockholm area,” adding that hotels as far away as 31 miles from the capital put up their prices as a result. Still, he expects the Beyoncé effect to be short-lived, with hotel prices likely to fall over June. Bruce Springsteen is due to play three shows in the Swedish city of Gothenburg later this month, which could put upward pressure on prices, Grahn said, but that’s not as likely. “What we saw with Beyoncé was a little bit special.”

Swedish consumers now have Beyoncé to blame for their bills, bills, bills.

Video above: StubHub ranks most in-demand summer concerts

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The chief economist at Danske Bank, the biggest bank in neighboring Denmark, said Wednesday that the singer’s decision to kick off her “Renaissance” world tour in Stockholm last month led to a surge in hotel and restaurant prices in the area as tens of thousands of fans descended on the city.

Michael Grahn estimated that the extra demand from Beyoncé’s fans, known collectively as the BeyHive, was behind two-thirds of the price rises seen in the hospitality sector in May.

That, in turn, contributed to a more modest decline in overall inflation than had been expected. Annual consumer price inflation eased to 9.7% in May from 10.5% the previous month, official statistics show, while economists polled by Reuters had predicted a sharper slowdown to 9.4%.

“[That’s] definitely not normal,” Grahn told CNN. “Stars come here all the time, [but] we seldom see effects like this.”

Grahn said many fans had traveled to Sweden for the two sold-out concerts in the country as tickets were relatively cheaper than elsewhere and a “very weak” Swedish currency boosted their spending power.

Some of Beyoncé’s U.S. fans told BuzzFeed News in February that they had snapped up tickets for the singer’s Swedish concerts at a huge discount to her U.S. shows.

Grahn noted that “there are a limited number of hotels and accommodation in the Stockholm area,” adding that hotels as far away as 31 miles from the capital put up their prices as a result.

Still, he expects the Beyoncé effect to be short-lived, with hotel prices likely to fall over June.

Bruce Springsteen is due to play three shows in the Swedish city of Gothenburg later this month, which could put upward pressure on prices, Grahn said, but that’s not as likely.

“What we saw with Beyoncé was a little bit special.”