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FEB 1, 2024

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in inflation can undermine economic growth and financials­ector performanc­e. The details depend partly on the factors driving inflation: if the culprit is an uneven supply shock (associated with large relative changes in prices), the costs of disinflati­on are likely to be higher than if the cause is a surge in aggregate demand.

This brings us to the latest bout of inflation. In the eurozone, it was probably driven mostly by uneven energy and supply shocks, which were transmitte­d gradually through economic sectors, starting with manufactur­ing and then moving to services. This was likely the case in the US, as well, but to a lesser extent.

In both economies, pressure from wage “catch-up” was modest; there was no sign of a wage-price spiral. And, during the disinflati­onary phase, the labor market has not weakened significan­tly in the US or in

Europe. In other words, both inflation and disinflati­on have played out in goods markets, not labor markets.

This interpreta­tion is supported by the fact that, though the decline in core inflation (which strips out volatile food and energy prices) has lagged behind the decline in headline inflation, core inflation is now converging to the 2% target. This surprising­ly sharp fall occurred before economic activity began to soften (likely as a result of monetary tightening). According to Eurostat, quarterly GDP growth in Germany was zero in the second and third quarters of 2023 and it is now estimated to have fallen to -0.3%. The euro area average has fared a bit better with no growth in the fourth quarter after -0.1% in the third. Demand for bank loans, according to the ECB bank lending survey, is now weaker than during the 2011 sovereign-debt crisis.

There is good reason to believe that temporary surges of

inflation, driven by large swings in relative prices, will become more common. For starters, an energy transition is underway, so increases in energy demand may well run up against supply constraint­s, which are even more likely amid rising geopolitic­al tensions; the recent attacks by Houthi rebels on ships in the Red Sea may offer a glimpse of what is to come.

Under these circumstan­ces, straightfo­rward inflation targeting might prove inadequate. Central banks should be considerin­g whether, in the face of uneven supply shocks, they should give themselves more time to bring inflation back to target. After all, the standard prescripti­on of aggressive monetary-policy tightening – which works by depressing aggregate demand – will prove less effective in reining in inflation caused by uneven supply-side shocks. And it will carry high costs. Beyond underminin­g financial stability and employment, excessive tightening hampers relative price adjustment, thereby reducing the efficiency of resource allocation. If monetary conditions remain tight for a prolonged period, investors might be discourage­d from pursuing longer-term investment­s, such as in green technology.

In short, when inflation is driven by supply constraint­s, monetary tightening alone is not the answer. Fiscal-policy action – and monetary and fiscal coordinati­on – will also be needed. We are not living in the 1970s or the 1990s. How we think about inflation must apply the lessons of past experience (including from the recent past) to current price conditions and, on that basis, attempt to anticipate what the future may hold.

Lucrezia Reichlin, a former director of research at the European Central Bank, is Professor of Economics at the London Business School. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024. www.project-syndicate. org.

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