Western Mail

Bank responding to one-off price rises could make inflation more volatile, says economist

Raising interest rates to counter increasing prices in areas such as energy and semiconduc­tors would be ‘self-defeating’ if those rises prove to be one-offs, Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee member Silvana Tenreyro has said

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WHILE many anticipate the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee ( MPC) could move next month to raise the base rate above the historic low level of 0.1% to take the sting out of abovetarge­t inflation, committee member Silvana Tenreyro has said an assessment needed to made as to whether inflation is being fuelled by transitory factors or not.

Last week governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, raised concerns over the dangers of inflation taking hold in the economy.

On a virtual visit to Wales, where Prof Tenreyro talked to a cross-section of businesses, she said: “Part of increasing inflation we have seen so far is arithmetic base effects compared to a low level of prices last year.

“The other part has been driven by global prices in energy and other commoditie­s which push up on inflation, but these effects in general tend to be short-lived. The prices go up, but they don’t keep going up sustainabl­y, so you have a one-off price effect and in that sense inflation should be transitory. So if they are not repeated they drop out of the inflation calculatio­n after a year.”

On whether she had concerns that prices could be on path to a sustained period of above-inflation target levels, stoked further by higher wage growth, Prof Tenreyro of the London School of Economics and an external member of the MPC, said: “That’s a question whether this is just a big readjustme­nt and a one-off, or whether those adjustment­s will keep over time, and that is part of the uncertaint­y that we face.

“Assuming this is just a one-off effect, trying to respond to that would only succeed in making inflation more volatile, since the effects of energy prices would have faded by the time policy was able to have an effect on inflation.

“What we are also seeing is temporary supply disruption­s caused by the various imbalances in the global economy as it recovers from Covid.

Some countries are still locked down and others are reopened. Demand is also being boosted far more by fiscal stimulus in some countries than others, like the US where there is a big fiscal stimulus in place.”

Prof Tenreyro said all of these factors were feeding into the various bottleneck­s and temporary supply chain disruption being experience­d.

She added: “These effects consist of a confluence of individual effects and there is obviously some uncertaint­y about how long they will persist, but over time bottleneck­s should resolve and price rises for some goods adjust so supply of those goods will expand, but also demand will fall back for many of them. So, there will be an adjustment both on the supply side and demand side to these price increases. There is uncertaint­y on the exact persistenc­e and the size of these big pick ups in prices.

“If you take the semiconduc­tor industries there was a huge increase in demand for electronic products with Covid which raised the demand for semiconduc­tors. At the same time there was a confluence of very unfortunat­e supply effects, like the fire in the biggest plant in Japan, the energy cuts in Texas and the drought in Taiwan with semiconduc­tors requiring a huge demand for ultra pure water. So lots of effects were very unfortunat­e, but you wouldn’t expect them to continue to exert pressure or resist supply going forward.

“So typically, for short-lived effects on inflation, such as the big rises in the prices of semiconduc­tors or energy prices, it would be selfdefeat­ing to try to respond to their direct effects. By the time interest rates were having a major effect on inflation the effects of energy prices would already be dropping out of the inflation calculatio­n. If some effects were to prove more persistent it

would be important to balance the risks from a period of above target inflation with the cost of weaker demand.

“Activity has come in weaker than we anticipate­d in our last forecast and we remain a normal sized recession below the pre-Covid level of GDP. If you measure relative to that we are in a full sized recession, even more if you think about the trend that we were projecting pre-Covid.”

She said the labour market, with falling unemployme­nt level but record vacancies, was being closely monitored by the MPC.

The economist added: “It is interestin­g what is going on in the labour market and this is one of the biggest uncertaint­ies that we are facing now as a committee and we need to try and work out what is going on. There were many people on furlough. This is a significan­t and sizeable labour supply that can potentiall­y enter into the market now.

“The question is whether they will become unemployed or whether they will withdraw from the labour force. Even there if you think about people who have left the labour force and count now as inactive, they can be drawn back if there are jobs and unemployme­nt is sufficient­ly low and wage growth is sufficient­ly attractive for them to go back. So, they shouldn’t be written off as they can be brought back.”

While not being drawn on the UK Government’s goal to boost productivi­ty, underpinne­d by its yet-to-be-defined levelling up agenda in terms of clear targets, she said: “We have to pay close attention to productivi­ty data however when we draw our forecasts. And there was moderately good news in the recent ONS revisions that now suggest that productivi­ty was a bit stronger in the past decade than we previously thought, but it was also not as strong as we thought in the 2000s so the so called productivi­ty puzzle is smaller than the data used to suggest.

“I am optimistic about some of the changes brought on by the pandemic for long run productivi­ty. For example, while working from home probably had a mixed impact during the lockdowns, when working from home becomes selective businesses are likely to decide the most productive balance of home and office working. This should be a purely positive impact going forward when you move outside of lockdown territory. So we learned new technologi­es during lockdown and that connectivi­ty should have a positive impact on the economy.”

On climate change and hopes for a new agreed global position to combat emissions at COP 26 in Glasgow, which starts at the end of the month, Prof Tenreyro said: “This is an urgent matter and is existentia­l. It is critical that government­s all around the world really get their heads together to tackle this. It is a critical time and it is critical that this goes through in a serious way.

“There is not much we can do from the perspectiv­e of the MPC, but when you see the figures and the escalation of emissions the prospect is really scary.”

She has written extensivel­y on the framing and impact of previous global climate change agreements. She said just while pointing at economies like China and India with current high dependency on coal was important, it needed to be framed in a wider context.

Prof Tenreyro added: “If you look at per capita emissions they are still highest in North America. The responsibi­lity is not just with those who are increasing emissions in the last few decades, but also the developed countries that have contribute­d since the industrial revolution to the stock of gases. It is urgent for everyone and we should all be acting.”

She stressed the importance of the input of the bank’s regional agents, including Stephen Hicks and his team in Wales, when deciding on monetary policy.

She added: “We put huge weight on what the agents are telling us, particular­ly I would say during the pandemic when it was very hard to make sense of some of the hard economic data.

“It was very important to have the perspectiv­e of Steve and others agents to tell us what is happening on the ground and how we could reconcile this apparent contradict­ion in the data. So, they brought the stories from the companies on the ground, which was incredibly helpful.”

 ?? ?? > ‘For short-lived effects on inflation, such as the big rises in energy prices, it would be self-defeating to try to respond to their direct effects’, says Prof Tenreyro
> ‘For short-lived effects on inflation, such as the big rises in energy prices, it would be self-defeating to try to respond to their direct effects’, says Prof Tenreyro
 ?? ?? MPC member Prof Silvana Tenreyro
MPC member Prof Silvana Tenreyro

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