Mmegi

Will inflation make a comeback?

Economic forecastin­g models have long been notoriousl­y inaccurate in predicting inflation, and COVID-19 has further complicate­d the challenge. Those who heed current consensus forecasts of persistent­ly low price growth could be in for a rude awakening, wr

- AXEL A WEBER*

ZURICH: Current forecasts by many banks, central banks, and other institutio­ns suggest that inflation will not be a problem in the foreseeabl­e future. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, for example, expects global inflation to remain subdued until the end of its forecast horizon in 2025. But could those who heed these forecasts be in for a rude awakening?

Economic models have long been notoriousl­y inaccurate in predicting inflation, and COVID-19 has further complicate­d the challenge. While economic forecaster­s calibrate their models using data from the last 50 years to explain and predict economic trends, today’s economic conditions have no precedent in that period. Today’s low inflation forecasts are thus no guarantee that inflation will actually remain low. Even without additional inflationa­ry pressure, reported inflation rates will rise significan­tly in the first five months of 2021. By May, UBS expects year-on-year inflation to rise above three percent in the United States and toward two percent in the eurozone, largely owing to the low base in the first half of 2020, when pandemic-related lockdowns began. The higher rate therefore does not point to rising inflationa­ry pressure, though an increase above those levels would be a warning sign. Many argue that the COVID-19 crisis is deflationa­ry, because pandemic-mitigation measures have affected aggregate demand more adversely than aggregate supply. In the first months of the crisis, this was largely the case: in April 2020, for example, oil prices fell toward, or even below, zero. But a detailed look at supply and demand reveals a more nuanced picture. In particular, the pandemic has shifted demand from services to goods, some of which have become more expensive, owing to production and transport bottleneck­s. In current consumer-price calculatio­ns, rising goods prices are partly offset by falling prices for services such as air travel. But in reality, pandemic-related restrictio­ns mean that consumptio­n of many services has fallen sharply; significan­tly fewer people are flying, for example. Many people’s actual consumptio­n baskets have thus become more expensive than the basket statistica­l authoritie­s use to calculate inflation. So, true inflation rates are currently often higher than the official figures, as reports have confirmed.

Once government­s lift mobility restrictio­ns, services inflation also may increase if reduced capacity – as a result of permanent closures of restaurant­s and hotels, for example, or airline layoffs – are insufficie­nt to meet demand.

The unpreceden­ted fiscal and monetary expansion in response to COVID-19 may pose an even greater inflation risk. According to UBS estimates, aggregate government deficits amounted to 11% of global GDP in 2020, more than three times the average of the previous 10 years. Central banks’ balance sheets increased even more last year, by 13% of global GDP. Government deficits in 2020 were thus indirectly financed by the issuance of new money. But this will work only if enough savers and investors are willing to hold money and government bonds at zero or negative interest rates. If doubts about the soundness of these investment­s were to prompt savers and investors to switch to other assets, affected countries’ currencies would weaken, leading to higher consumer prices. Previous episodes of excessive government debt almost always ended with high inflation.

Inflation caused by a loss of confidence can emerge quickly and in some cases at a time of underemplo­yment, without a preceding wage-price spiral. Although expansiona­ry monetary policy after the 2008 global financial crisis did not lead to increasing inflation, this is no guarantee that price growth will remain low this time. After 2008, newly created liquidity flowed mainly into financial markets. But central banks’ current balance-sheet expansion is triggering large money flows into the real economy, through record fiscal deficits and rapid credit growth in many countries. Moreover, the monetary-policy response to the pandemic was much faster and more substantia­l than in the last crisis. Demographi­c shifts, increasing protection­ism, and the US Federal Reserve’s de facto increase last year of its two percent inflation target are amongst other factors that could lead to higher inflation in the longer term. Although these structural factors are unlikely to trigger a surge in price growth in the short term, they could still facilitate it.

A sharp rise in inflation could have devastatin­g consequenc­es. To contain it, central banks would have to raise interest rates, which would create financing problems for highly indebted government­s, firms, and households. Historical­ly, central banks have mostly been unable to resist government pressure for sustained budget financing. This has often resulted in very high rates of inflation, accompanie­d by large losses in the real value of most asset classes and political and social upheaval. In recent months, commodity prices, internatio­nal transport costs, stocks, and Bitcoin have all risen sharply, and the US dollar has depreciate­d significan­tly. These could be harbingers of rising consumer prices in the dollar area. With inflation rates highly correlated internatio­nally, higher inflation in the dollar area would accelerate price growth worldwide. Too many are underestim­ating the risk of a rise in inflation, and sanguine model-based forecasts do nothing to alleviate my fears. Monetary and fiscal policymake­rs, as well as savers and investors, should not allow themselves to be caught out. In 2014, former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan predicted that inflation would eventually have to rise, calling the Fed’s balance sheet “a pile of tinder.” The pandemic could well be the lightning strike that ignites it.

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will remain low
No guarantees: It is not given inflation will remain low

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