Business World

Draghi’s riddle of missing inflation argues for central bank’s patience

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WHEN Mario Draghi is asked on Monday why the European Central Bank can’t yet signal tightening for the region’s resurgent economy, he can respond with a question of his own: Where’s the inflation?

At his quarterly grilling before the European Parliament — and his final scheduled appearance before next week’s monetarypo­licy decision — the ECB president is likely to be pressed about his plans for stimulus withdrawal.

While euro-area data this week may show the strongest economic confidence in a decade and the lowest unemployme­nt since 2009, Draghi can still point to consumer prices that are struggling to lift off.

The disconnect between accelerati­ng growth and sluggish inflation is a puzzle haunting officials as they prepare to meet on June 8 in Tallinn. Draghi, who has tried to quash speculatio­n that the ECB might opt for a faster exit from bond purchases and sub- zero rates, faces the challenge of acknowledg­ing the economy’s gains without priming markets for action that many would consider premature.

“Draghi will explain that the improvemen­t in the economy is not sufficient at this point to make sure that the improvemen­t in the inflation outlook is self-sustained,” said Philippe Gudin, chief European economist at Barclays Plc.

“We are still far from the point at which we could see inflationa­ry pressures materializ­ing.”

Draghi’s hearing at the European Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee is an opportune moment to tout the euro area’s recovery — and the role of the ECB’s €2.3-trillion ($2.6 trillion) bond-buying program.

“I think he has to be quite dovish,” Peter Rosenstrei­ch, head of market strategy at Swissquote, said on Bloomberg Television on Monday. “There’s growing expectatio­n that inflation is building and that the time for unorthodox extreme monetary policy is now coming to an end.”

Economic activity, as measured by a Purchasing Managers’ Index, is at the highest in six years and at levels that in the past have warranted monetary tightening.

Data on Tuesday is likely to show economic confidence at the strongest in almost a decade, and figures the next day will probably reveal an unemployme­nt rate at the lowest since early 2009.

In Germany, the euro area’s economic powerhouse, business sentiment is at levels not seen since at least 1991.

But Draghi’s four-year inflationa­ry campaign has so far failed to put price growth on a selfsustai­ning path toward the ECB’s goal of just un-

der 2%. If anything, there are hints that the target is receding further into the future. Economists predict that data due Wednesday will show the inflation rate fell to 1.5% in May from 1.9%. More worryingly for the central bank, core inflation is slated to slow to 1%.

Even if those are temporary blips, the longer- term outlook shows that price pressures will increase only gradually. According to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce research, inflation will accelerate to 1.8% in 2021, two years after the end of Draghi’s term. The European Commission cut its forecast for 2018 inflation to 1.3% and the ECB, which is updating its own forecasts to be published at the June policy meeting, may have to follow suit.

With numbers like these, Draghi and his closest collaborat­ors last week restated that the ECB will stick to its current normalizat­ion plan, which foresees rate increases only well after asset purchases have been tapered. The quantitati­ve-easing program is currently scheduled to run at €60 billion a month until at least the end of the year.

While the exit debate within the Governing Council will probably start in earnest at the Tallinn meeting, it may yield only minor changes to policy communicat­ion for now, such as the removal of an explicit pledge to cut rates further if needed or the recognitio­n that risks to the recovery are no longer skewed to the downside. Even that may be too much for some.

“The recovery in the euro area is resilient and increasing­ly broad-based even if overall risks remain tilted to the downside,” Vice- President Vitor Constancio said on Thursday. The continuati­on of “monetary stimulus remains important to ensure a sustainabl­e adjustment of the inflation process.”

WAGE WORRY

A missing element in the ECB’s inflation mix is wages, which have been rising very slowly despite falling unemployme­nt, even in countries like Germany where joblessnes­s is at a record low.

As many of the jobs created since the crisis are short-term or part-time, the labor market may have greater spare capacity than official measures suggest, leading workers to opt for more hours before higher salaries.

A pick-up in real wages may have to wait until the beginning of next year, when many collective contracts will come up for renegotiat­ion.

That’s all reason for Draghi to stick to his rhetoric of patience and caution.

“He’s not yet sufficient­ly confident on the durability of the inflation recovery, and there are few signs of an improving coreinflat­ion outlook,” said Anatoli Annenkov, senior economist at Societe Generale in London. “I doubt his message will change much compared to recent appearance­s.”

 ??  ?? EUROPEAN Central Bank President Mario Draghi will likely talk about his plans for stimulus withdrawal this week.
EUROPEAN Central Bank President Mario Draghi will likely talk about his plans for stimulus withdrawal this week.

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