Weekend Herald

Nations signing up for the war on inflation

More countries follow US lead, lifting interest rates to combat rising prices

- Jamie Gray

Aday after the US Federal Reserve lifted interest rates sharply and signalled more to come, central banks across Asia and Europe followed suit on Thursday, waging their own campaigns to crush an outbreak of inflation that is bedevillin­g consumers and worrying policymake­rs around the globe.

Central bankers typically move slowly. That’s because their policy tools are blunt and work with a lag. The interest rate increases taking place from Washington to Jakarta will need months to filter out across the global economy and take full effect. Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, once likened policymaki­ng to walking through a furnished room with the lights off: you go slowly to avoid a painful outcome.

Yet officials, learning from a history that has illustrate­d the perils of taking too long to stamp out price increases, have decided that they no longer have the luxury of patience.

Inflation has been relentless­ly rapid for a year and a half now.

The longer that remains the case, the greater the risk that it is going to become a permanent feature of the economy. Employment contracts might begin to factor in cost-of-living increases, companies might begin to routinely raise prices and inflation might become part of the fabric of society. Many economists think that happened in the 1970s, when the Fed tolerated out-of-control price increases for years — allowing an “inflationa­ry psychology” to take hold that later proved excruciati­ng to crush.

But the aggressive­ness of the monetary policy action now underway also pushes central banks into new and risky territory. Some economists warn that by tightening quickly and simultaneo­usly at a time when growth in China and Europe is already slowing and supply chain pressures are easing, global central banks risk overdoing it. They may plunge economies into recessions that are deeper than necessary to curb inflation, sending unemployme­nt significan­tly higher.

“The margin of error now is very thin,” said Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance. “A lot of this comes down to judgment, and how much emphasis to put on the 1970s scenario.”

In the 1970s, Fed policymake­rs did lift interest rates in a bid to control inflation, but they backed off when the economy began to slow. That allowed inflation to remain elevated for years, and when oil prices spiked in 1979, it reached untenable levels. The Fed, under Paul Volcker, ultimately raised rates to nearly 20 per cent — and sent US unemployme­nt soaring to more than 10 per cent — in an effort to wrestle the price increases down.

That example weighs heavily on policymake­rs’ minds today.

“We think that a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain later on,” Powell said at his news conference on Wednesday (US time), after the Fed raised rates by threequart­ers of a percentage point for a third straight time. The Fed expects to raise borrowing costs to 4.4 per cent next year in the fastest tightening campaign since the 1980s.

The Bank of England on Thursday (UK time) raised interest rates by half a point to 2.25 per cent, even as it said that the United Kingdom might already be in a recession. The European Central Bank is similarly expected to continue raising rates at its meeting in October to combat high inflation, even as Russia’s war in Ukraine throws Europe’s economy into turmoil.

As the major monetary authoritie­s lift borrowing costs, their trading

No one knows whether this process will lead to a recession, or if so, how significan­t that recession would be.

US Federal reserve chair Jerome Powell

partners are following suit, in some cases to avoid big moves in their currencies that could push up local import prices or cause financial instabilit­y.

On Thursday, Indonesia, Taiwan, the Philippine­s, South Africa and Norway lifted rates, and a large move by Switzerlan­d’s central bank ended the era of below-zero interest rates in Europe. Japan has comparativ­ely low inflation and is keeping rates low, but it intervened in currency markets for the first time in 24 years on Thursday to prop up the yen in light of all of the action by its counterpar­ts.

The wave of central bank action is expected to have consequenc­es, working by design to sharply slow both interconne­cted commerce and national economies. The Fed, for instance, sees its moves pushing US unemployme­nt to 4.4 per cent in 2023, up from the current jobless rate of 3.7 per cent.

Already, the moves are beginning to have an impact. Climbing interest rates are making it more expensive to borrow money to buy a car or a house in many nations. Mortgage rates in the United States are back above 6 per cent for the first time since 2008, and the housing market is cooling down. Markets have swooned this year in response to the tough talk coming from central banks, reducing the amount of capital available to big companies and cutting into household wealth.

Yet the full effect could take months or even years to be felt.

Rates are rising from low levels, and the latest moves have not yet had time to fully play out. In continenta­l Europe and Britain, the war in

Ukraine rather than monetary tightening is pushing economies toward recession. And in the United States, where the fallout from the war is far less severe, hiring and the job market remain strong, at least for now. Consumer spending, while slowing, is not plummeting.

That is why the Fed believes it has more work to do to slow the economy — even if that increases the risk of a downturn.

“We have always understood that restoring price stability while achieving a relatively modest increase in unemployme­nt, and a soft landing, would be very challengin­g,” Powell said on Wednesday. “No one knows whether this process will lead to a recession, or if so, how significan­t that recession would be.”

Many global central bankers have painted today’s inflation burst as a situation in which their credibilit­y is on the line.

“For the first time in four decades, central banks need to prove how determined they are to protect price stability,” Isabel Schnabel, an executive board member of the European Central Bank, said at a Fed conference in Wyoming last month.

But that does not mean that the policy path the Fed and its counterpar­ts are carving out is unanimousl­y agreed upon — or unambiguou­sly the correct one. This is not the 1970s, some economists have pointed out. Inflation has not been elevated for as long, supply chains appear to be healing, and measures of inflation expectatio­ns remain under control.

Brooks at the Institute of Internatio­nal

Finance sees the pace of tightening in Europe as a mistake, and thinks that the Fed, too, could overdo it at a time when supply shocks are fading and the full effects of recent policy moves have yet to play out.

Maurice Obstfeld, an economist at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics and former chief economist of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, wrote in a recent analysis that there is a risk that global central banks are not paying enough attention to one another.

“Central banks clearly are scrambling to raise interest rates as inflation runs at levels not seen for nearly two generation­s,” he wrote.

“But there can be too much of a good thing. Now is the time for monetary policymake­rs to put their heads up and look around.”

Still, at many central banks around the world, policymake­rs are treating it as their duty to remain resolute in the fight against price increases. And that is translatin­g into forceful action now, regardless of the imminent and uncertain costs.

Powell may have once warned that moving quickly in a dark room could end painfully. But now, it’s as if the room is on fire: the threat of a stubbed toe still exists, but moving slowly and cautiously risks even greater peril.

New York Times

There can be too much of a good thing. Now is the time for monetary policymake­rs to put their heads up and look around. Economist Maurice Obstfeld

See also: NZ rates rise C6

New Zealand two-year swap rates hit their highest point since the global financial crisis yesterday in response to a rash of central bank rate hikes.

Two-year swaps — an important source of funding for bank home mortgage lending — hit 4.63 per cent, their highest point since late 2009.

The US Federal Reserve’s 75-basis-point rate hike mid-week, accompanie­d by some hawkish commentary by Fed chairman Jay Powell, set the ball rolling for other central banks, including the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank, where the rate went into positive territory for the first time since 2015.

Local two-year swaps had already been rising on expectatio­ns that the Reserve Bank of NZ might have to work harder to stem rising inflation.

“It [the two-year swap rate] is at a new cycle high and it essentiall­y reflects the market coming around to the view that there is more work to be done by all central banks, and the local Reserve Bank is not immune from that as well,” said ANZ strategist David Croy.

Comments from central banks this week focused on the need to get on top of inflation.

“New Zealand was going it alone a little bit there, and that was what was holding the market back a little bit,” Croy said.

“But now that these other central banks have joined the party insofar as the hawkish rhetoric goes, we have seen an outsized move today in the swaps market,” he said.

Last week the ANZ said the official cash rate might have to reach 4.75 per cent, following the release of data showing GDP grew by a higher-than-expected 1.7 per cent in the June quarter.

“The economy is not rolling over, with the tight labour market and strong wage growth partially offsetting the impact of higher interest rates,” the bank’s economists said.

 ?? Photo / Scott McIntyre, The New York Times ?? US consumer spending is slowing, but not plunging, and the job market remains strong despite rising rates.
Photo / Scott McIntyre, The New York Times US consumer spending is slowing, but not plunging, and the job market remains strong despite rising rates.

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