Arab News

Euro zone inflation falls despite thriving economy

Workers still too wary to demand big wage gains as output races ahead

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LONDON: Inflation across the 19-country euro zone remains stubbornly low even though the economic recovery across the singlecurr­ency bloc appears to be gaining more and more momentum.

At first glance, that’s a bit of a paradox: a buoyant economy should help reduce unemployme­nt, stoking wages and consumer prices. But in the wake of a near-decade-long economic crisis that saw unemployme­nt in many parts of the region jump dramatical­ly, that economic transmissi­on mechanism appears to have broken down, for now at least, with workers still too wary to ask for big wage gains.

Official figures released Friday showed consumer prices rose 1.4 percent in the year to December, down from the previous month’s 1.5 percent rate, largely because of a smaller rise in energy prices.

The decline pushed inflation even further away from the European Central Bank’s policy goal of just below 2 percent. Of perhaps greater concern to policymake­rs at the bank is that the core rate as measured by statistics agency Eurostat, which strips out potentiall­y volatile items such as energy and food, remained even lower at 0.9 percent.

That is a clear indication that wage rises remain subdued across the euro zone even though the recovery is going very well guns and the ECB has slashed interest rates and pumped hundreds of billions of euros into the euro zone economy.

A series of surveys have shown that the super-cheap monetary policy pursued by the ECB is one factor behind the burgeoning recovery — financial informatio­n firm IHS Markit said growth in the fourth quarter could come in at an impressive quarterly rate of 0.8 percent.

The recovery has been given further impetus by the fading away of key risks. Worries that populist politician­s across the euro zone would win power in a series of elections in 2017, notably in France and the Netherland­s, failed to materializ­e, while concerns over the future of Greece in the euro zone have eased markedly.

Unemployme­nt across the euro zone has been falling steadily, notably in Spain, which endured a skyhigh rate of around 25 percent for years. Still, unemployme­nt across the region remains more or less relatively high at 8.8 percent, more-orless double the rate in the US.

The ECB remains convinced that the sustained fall in unemployme­nt will eventually start to work its way through into higher wages, which should help inflation get to its target rate. How quickly that happens is likely to determine when the ECB ends its massive bond-buying stimulus program, which is currently set to last at least through September.

ECB President Mario Draghi has argued that the recent era of low interest rates and negligible inflation may have convinced wage negotiator­s to settle for lower pay deals, with many possibly more focused on keeping jobs than securing higher salaries.

He has laid out his hope that these factors are likely to be “transitory” and that with spare capacity in the economy diminishin­g, wages should start to pick up, supporting consumer demand and boosting consumer prices.

Bert Colijn, senior euro zone economist at ING, said there are signs in surveys that the normal transmissi­on mechanism by which higher growth leads to higher pay and inflation is beginning to show itself and that wage growth will “start to pick up more meaningful­ly this year” as firms look to hire to meet demand. He is predicting the core rate to end the year at 1.5 percent.

“Therefore, the ECB is unlikely to change course early in the year, even if economic data continues to surprise on the upside,” he said.

 ??  ?? Fireworks explode in front of the European Central Bank during New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in Frankfurt. Analysts cite the super-cheap monetary policy pursued by the ECB as one factor behind the burgeoning recovery in the EU which has not been accompanie­d by a correspond­ing pickup in inflation. (Reuters)
Fireworks explode in front of the European Central Bank during New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in Frankfurt. Analysts cite the super-cheap monetary policy pursued by the ECB as one factor behind the burgeoning recovery in the EU which has not been accompanie­d by a correspond­ing pickup in inflation. (Reuters)

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