Business World

ECB faces bumpy road to low prices as wages rise

- Reuters

FRANKFURT — Workers in Europe are hoping this year’s pay round will help restore incomes eroded by higher prices, but the expected boost to their purchasing power could hamper the European Central Bank’s efforts to bring inflation back to target.

The ECB has singled out wages as the single biggest risk to its one-and-a-halfyear crusade against inflation. It expects salary growth across the euro zone of 4.6% this year, far more than the 3% it considers consistent with inflation at its 2% target.

Higher wage settlement­s would be a risk to interest-rate cuts that financial markets are betting will start in April.

“We see a path to 3% (wage growth) but it will be a bumpy road,” Reamonn Lydon, an economist at the Central Bank of Ireland and one of the minds behind the popular Indeed Wage Tracker, said in an interview.

Pay hikes increase costs for companies and boost household income, both factors that might push up prices and require the ECB to keep rates high.

Unions see a combinatio­n of gradually cooling inflation, low unemployme­nt and fat corporate profit margins as their best and possibly last shot this economic cycle at restoring workers’ living standards.

And after seeing their real wages drop by roughly 5% in 2022 to 2023 — and decades in which labor has lost its leverage — wage-earners are ready to fight. US giants Tesla and Amazon are among companies already grappling with strikes in Europe.

Unlike in the United States, there is no real-time wage data for the 20-country euro zone.

But the Indeed Wage Tracker, which measures salaries advertised on that website, is closely watched by the ECB as an indicator of future trends. It ticked higher in December to 3.8% from 3.7%, although that was well below a peak of 5.2% in October 2022, when inflation was at its peak.

Lydon and Indeed’s Pawel Adrjan said December’s increase was probably driven by new wage deals, an effect they saw continuing in early 2024 as more agreements are struck and minimum wage increases kick in.

DEALS

Among recent settlement­s, wages rose by 4.5% for employees at Spanish stores of Carrefour SA and IKEA, 5% at French energy major TotalEnerg­ies and 6.6% for Dutch rail workers. French Uber drivers’ minimum hourly rate rose 17.6%.

Minimum wages were meanwhile lifted by 3.4% in Germany, 3.8% in the Netherland­s and 5% in Spain.

“Everything points to a return to real wage growth,” said Martin Hoepner, a professor at the Max-Planck-Institute for the study of society in Cologne, Germany.

Emboldened by worker shortages that have only started easing, labor unions hope to reverse a trend of falling membership that accelerate­d with globalizat­ion in the 1990s.

Employees at French stateowned power group EDF are demanding a 6% wage increase or they will go on strike while some German rail workers turned down an 11% rise, spread over time, because they wanted a shorter working week.

Some Amazon workers in Spain staged walkouts during the crucial holiday season and Tesla has faced blockades in Nordic countries aimed at making it sign a collective bargaining agreement in Sweden.

“At the moment the economic conditions are obviously conducive to strengthen­ing the unions’ bargaining position,” Torsten Mueller, a researcher at the trade union institute, said.

But Lucio Baccaro, also a professor at the Max Planck Institute, said such “wage militancy” could backfire if it caused the ECB to keep interest rates higher to curb demand.

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