The Borneo Post

ECB leads the big parade, Fed strolls the other way

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Most concerning (in the global outlook) is the renewed deteriorat­ion in the inflation outlook in the euro area and Japan.

LONDON: When Morocco’s central bank cut interest rates on March 22, it joined a parade of 46 others that have eased monetary policy at least once since the beginning of 2015.

Perhaps more trenchantl­y, it was also the 15th time this year - still less than a quarter old - that a central bank has eased policy in some form. Taiwan and Turkey have since taken that up to 17.

The parade is clearly still on the march, with the European Central Bank ( ECB) waving the baton somewhere out in front. The US Federal Reserve, however, is strolling the other way, having raised rates.

The coming week should underline why, in both cases

The 19-nation eurozone will release inflation data for March on Thursday and it is expected to show prices fell on an annual basis for the second month in a row.

US exceptiona­lism should be on display the day after, with US monthly jobs data showing continued, if perhaps not overwhelmi­ng, growth.

For the eurozone, a Reuters poll shows year- on-year inflation coming in at - 0.1 per cent, a smaller fall than the - 0.3 per cent in February, but still an actual fall in prices.

While some may argue that this is not real deflation – that is, it is neither deeply embedded nor yet deterring consumers from buying on the grounds that things will

Christian Keller, Barclays economist

get cheaper – it is a far cry from what the European Central Bank wants it to be.

The ECB seeks to have inflation running at just below two per cent, something it has not had since early 2013.

It is for that reason – as well as the fragility of growth – that the bank this month expanded its money-printing and cut rates.

The impact will for the most part not be seen in Thursday’s data, but some are sceptical that anything will change soon, and another fall in prices will do little to encourage a belief that things are on the mend.

“Most concerning (in the global outlook) is the renewed deteriorat­ion in the inflation outlook in the euro area and Japan,” Barclays economist Christian Keller said in a note.

“Oil and other transitory factors play a role, but second-round effects and worsening expectatio­ns can turn this into a persistent trend, moving the two per cent inflation targets further out of reach.”

The US payroll figure, meanwhile, is expected to come in at 200,000 new jobs - which is less than the previous month’s 242,000 but still solid in terms of the past six years or so.

The issue here is not so much jobs, given that the US unemployme­nt rate is a relatively low 4.9 per cent. Rather, it is whether the economic climate is conducive to another Fed interest rate hike.

There have been some mixed messages lately.

Fed chair Janet Yellen sounded surprising­ly dovish to some after the March 16 rate meeting but since then, other policy makers have been pretty forceful, leading to expectatio­ns of at least two more hikes this year.

Philadelph­ia Fed president Patrick Harker, for example, has said his colleagues need to “get on with it” and raise rates again.

How the jobs data plays into that was clear from the Fed’s last policy statement on March 16.

“A range of recent indicators, including strong job gains, points to additional strengthen­ing of the labor market,” it said, adding that inflation had also picked up.

The ECB should be so lucky.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Photo shows a view of the ECB headquarte­rs. ECB seeks to have inflation running at just below two per cent, something it has not had since early 2013.
— Reuters photo Photo shows a view of the ECB headquarte­rs. ECB seeks to have inflation running at just below two per cent, something it has not had since early 2013.

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