Marin Independent Journal

IMF warns Europe against prematurel­y declaring victory over inflation

- By David Mchugh

The European Central Bank and other policymake­rs across Europe need to keep interest rates at current elevated levels until they're sure inflation is under control despite sluggish growth, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said Wednesday, warning against “premature celebratio­n” as inflation declines from its peak.

The Washington-based IMF said that the cost of underestim­ating inflation's persistenc­e could be painfully high and result in another round of rate hikes that could rob the economy of a large chunk of growth.

The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the other central banks that aren't part of the 20-country eurozone “are reaching the peak of their interest rate cycles, while some have started to reduce policy rates,” the IMF said in its twice-yearly regional economic outlook for Europe. “Nonetheles­s, a prolonged restrictiv­e stance is still necessary to ensure that inflation moves back to target.”

Historical­ly, it takes an average of three years to return inflation to lower levels, while some anti-inflation campaigns have taken even longer, the IMF said. While central banks appear to have ended their series of hikes, a failure to finish the job and the resulting return to rate hikes could cost as much as a full percentage point of annual economic output.

Alfred Kammer, director of the IMF's Europe department, warned against “premature celebratio­n” as he spoke to journalist­s in connection with the outlook. “It is less costly to be too tight than too loose” with interest-rate policy, Kammer said. The ECB, which halted its rate increases at its Oct. 26 for the first time in over a year, “is in a good spot,” he said.

Inflation in the eurozone peaked at 10.6% in October 2022, and has steadily fallen to 2.9% in October.

The European Central Bank has raised its benchmark deposit rate by fully 4.5 percentage points between July 2022 and September 2023, from minus 0.5% to 4%. Higher rates are the typical tool central banks use to control inflation, since higher rates mean higher borrowing costs for consumer purchases and financing new officials and factory equipment. That reduces demand for goods and eases pressure on prices, but can also hurt growth — a difficult tightrope act for the ECB.

The Bank of England left its benchmark rate unchanged at 5.25% at a policy meeting last week.

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