In May 2025, Jordan experienced a year-on-year decline in producer prices of 1.39%, following a 0.75% reduction recorded in April. This marked the fourth consecutive month of deflation, with producer prices seeing their sharpest decline since October 2024. This downward trend was largely attributable to a significant drop in manufacturing prices, which fell by 1.87% compared to a 0.94% reduction in the previous month. Conversely, costs rose in the mining and quarrying sector, increasing by 2.81% compared to April's 0.49% rise, and electricity prices also saw an upward shift of 2.16% from 1.02%. On a monthly basis, producer prices decreased by 0.17% in May, showing a slower decline than April’s 0.57% decrease. Over the first five months of 2025, producer prices collectively decreased by 0.49% compared to the same period in 2024.