More stories

  • in

    Tight monetary stance needed in many emerging European economies, says IMF

    (Reuters) – Underlying inflation in central, eastern and southeastern Europe is stronger than in advanced economies, requiring many central banks in the region to maintain a tight monetary stance for longer than the European Central Bank, a top IMF official said.Aided by a retreat in price growth from double digits, some central banks in the region have started lowering interest rates, led by Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, with Romania’s central bank holding off on rate easing for now.”The decline of the inflation rate is progressing more slowly in Romania, Moldova, Montenegro, Hungary, and Serbia than elsewhere in the CESEE region,” International Monetary Fund European Department Director Alfred Kammer said.”In general, the underlying inflationary pressures in the region remain stronger than in advanced economies,” he said.”Many central banks in the region should therefore maintain a tight monetary stance for longer than, for example, the ECB.”A June rate cut by the ECB is fully priced in by investors and most policymakers have lined up behind such a move.In a speech prepared for an economics forum in the Croatian town of Split, Kammer said government plans to roll back extraordinary support measures for households and companies this year and next will help fight inflation by curbing demand.Kammer said that during the 2021 to 2023 period, there was an erosion of trust in economic institutions in emerging Europe, with several central banks facing political interference.”Let me be clear, central banks need to be able to fulfil their mandates on inflation. For this, independence is essential. Interference erodes trust and makes policymaking more costly,” he said.Kammer said achieving a soft landing in the region will not be easy but it is important given the even more daunting task of boosting emerging Europe’s growth prospects in a lasting manner.Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the speed of convergence of emerging European economies towards their advanced European peers had slowed, he said.That means countries would typically converge to average living standards in the EU, excluding emerging European members, only around 2100, 50 years later than previously projected, he said. More

  • in

    We should fear a sticky inflation mess

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.In January 1919, a 12,000 ton tank of molasses burst in Boston’s hilly North End, sending a slow-moving wave of the sticky syrup right into the heart of the neighbourhood. The Great Molasses Flood claimed the lives of 21 Bostonians, trapping them in a viscous river of the refined sugar cane. Its legacy lives on in Boston lore, with residents of the North End claiming they can still smell the molasses on a summer’s day.The tragedy goes to show that “sticky” — despite seeming a less potent state of matter than “sharp” or “spiky” — can be dangerous. That’s particularly true for inflation. And stickiness of price growth may be fated to remain longer than central banks are anticipating, especially if previous economic trends hold in the coming years.A recent report by the Bank for International Settlements has explored this issue in depth. MainFT wrote up the headline findings last week, but the paper is interesting enough to warrant a fuller write-up. Basically, the BIS points out that services inflation has historically been structurally higher than goods inflation, running at about 1 percentage points above core goods inflation in the two decades leading up to the pandemic. Its economists attribute this to two main factors, with Alphaville’s emphasis in bold below:First, a higher income elasticity of services: as income per capita rises, so does the relative demand for services and hence their relative price. Second, in what is commonly known as the Baumol cost disease, rising wages in higher productivity sectors push the costs in labour-intensive services sectors up, while lower productivity growth in the services sector then leads to higher services prices.In other words, as people get more discretionary income, they spend more on services, like nicer hotels or fancier barbers. The Baumol disease might sound like an unpleasant bowel affliction, but it is essentially posits that the contagion of higher wages makes services more prone to price growth. This trend was well documented across many countries over the past two decades, but was disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic, when consumers couldn’t spend money on services and instead went on a frenzy of buying Instagram-peddled clothing, home gyms and more Zoom-friendly furniture, straining international shipping lanes and driving up prices.Goods prices have remained high in the wake of that shift, as record pent-up demand and Russia’s war in Ukraine contributed to the surge in inflation. But goods prices have started to come down, while services have remained high.Many have already commented on the stickiness of services inflation, including the ECB, and have opined over whether it is caused by a structural delay in services price changes or greedy consumers (including Catherine Mann, in a surprise “eat the rich” turn).But the BIS report argues that services inflation could reassert its previous structurally higher growth trend, causing central banks to delay rate cuts or requiring them to take even more aggressive measures. Once again FTAV’s emphasis below:Importantly, these scenario-based higher growth rates of services prices would imply overall inflation rates that are roughly 1 percentage point above inflation targets. However, the scenario embeds the implicit assumption that central banks will not react; this is not going to be the case if inflation remains above target.This would be akin to dunking the economy in a slow-moving tide of molasses. To illustrate this scenario the BIS created this graph, which shows OECD services inflation remaining above target until the end of 2025:And this one, showing what the ratio of core goods to services in advanced economies would be if they were to resume their pre-pandemic trend:You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Unfortunately, there could be more bad news. Some economists are sceptical of the implied assumption in these forecasts that goods prices will revert to the happy pre-pandemic trend of generally being a disinflationary force. In other words, services inflation may run hotter for longer but goods inflation could very well be uncomfortably hot as well, due to some pretty important structural economic changes since Covid. As Oliver Rakau of Oxford Economics puts it:The integration of emerging Asian markets into trade over the last two decades drove down prices for goods, as well as general productivity growth in manufacturing and other industries. This is arguably much less the case looking ahead given de-globalization efforts between the West and China.This would be a very awkward situation for many central banks, which would then not be able to simply rely on slower or even negative goods inflation counteracting faster services inflation — which is what in practice many could do in the last two decades. But the worst scenario is if uncomfortably high services and goods inflation start to feed on each other and Baumol’s cost disease really starts to manifest itself in a major way. The BIS nods to this danger at the end of its paper:While goods prices in some jurisdictions in late 2023 and early 2024 are below previous trends, global forces can structurally alter the dynamics of inflation in the longer term. Climate change could create upward pressures on goods prices through more severe disruptive weather events or drought-induced restrictions on freight shipping in waterways. Geopolitical tensions could add to these pressures, including through a reorganisation of global value chains. This means that, all else equal, services price growth may have to be much lower than it was in the decades that preceded the pandemic if inflation targets are to be achieved.Which the BIS clearly doesn’t think is going to happen. Yay.The BIS does cursorily wave at some reasons for optimism, namely that gains in productivity on the back of AI could structurally lower services price growth, or that labour markets might readjust. But just as the good people of Boston learned as the saccharine ooze swept them down Commercial Street, we should all fear hot sticky messes. More

  • in

    China eases tourist visa restrictions to boost economy

    Lugging his backpack around the Forbidden City in Beijing, French tourist Xavier counted himself as “lucky” to be at the vanguard of China’s latest campaign to reinvigorate its flagging economy.The young traveller, clad in a woolly jacket and pink-tinted sunglasses, came to China last month after it abruptly announced visa-free access to citizens of France and five other mainly European countries late last year. Starting on Thursday, visitors from Austria, Belgium, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg and Switzerland were also allowed to enter visa-free.This is in addition to mutual visa-waiver deals with Singapore and Thailand, a reinstated visa-free agreement with Brunei that was suspended during the pandemic and visa exemptions for those on short transit visits to the country.The moves are aimed at reviving a multibillion-dollar international tourism industry that is still struggling to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic, geopolitical tensions and a weak economy. The visa waiver “saved me a lot of money”, said Xavier, who had paid $120 for a visa when he visited China in 2019.More than a year after Beijing lifted strict Covid controls that cut off the country from the rest of the world for almost three years, foreign visitors have yet to return in force. Last year, China recorded 35mn entries and exits by foreign nationals, only a third of the nearly 98mn in 2019. State media outlets have estimated that between 2020 and late last year, the pandemic cost China $362bn in lost international tourist revenue.French tourist Céline Bardote Machado visits a park near the Forbidden City. She took advantage of the new visa-free policy to make a stop in Beijing on her way to South Korea More

  • in

    Australia’s RBA to hold rates on March 19, cut later in year: Reuters poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – Australia’s central bank will hold its key interest rate at 4.35% for a third straight meeting on Tuesday and at least until end-September, according to a Reuters poll of economists who see at least two rate cuts in the final quarter of 2024. While financial markets have priced in rate cuts for most other major central banks starting around June, the Reserve Bank of Australia is a notable outlier with no such mid-year pricing.Despite the RBA’s recent hawkish stance and still-elevated inflation, no economist expected the next move to be up, with a variety of forecasts for a cut in the second half of this year given that economic growth has been lacklustre. “We are seeing below-trend growth and so we think unless we get a large upside surprise, it’s more a matter of how long they have to wait and stay in restrictive territory rather than being pushed higher. We certainly don’t think the RBA is going to be in a position to cut rates for some time yet,” said Taylor Nugent, senior economist at NAB.All 40 economists polled by Reuters March 11-14 predicted the RBA would keep its official cash rate unchanged at 4.35% on March 19. “For the March meeting, we don’t expect the RBA to change their communication too much. Data has come broadly in line with what they expect and we think they’ll need to see more evidence on the domestic inflation picture before really updating their view,” Nugent added.All major local banks – CBA, Westpac, ANZ and NAB – forecast no change in rates until at least end-August. CBA and Westpac saw the first rate cut in September, while ANZ and NAB forecast it in November, the same as last month’s poll. The timing of rate cuts from the RBA also may be guided by when the U.S. Federal Reserve starts easing, which is widely expected to happen in June. Historically, the RBA has eased well after the Fed and cut at a much slower pace. Although median poll forecasts since late last year have showed the first RBA cut will come in the final quarter of 2024, views around exactly when are still divided, with no majority for any meeting, but with the strongest minority for November.Interest rate futures are pricing in a 25-basis-point cut by end-September.Of the 32 economists polled who specified a meeting for the first cut, 13 said November. Another two said June, eight said August, four said September, and five said February 2025.The median forecast showed rates at 4.35% through end-September, with two rate cuts to 3.85% by end-2024. A slight 55% majority, 22 of 40, said rates will fall by at least 50 basis points by end-year. Another 12 said just one 25-basis-point cut and the remaining six said rates would stay on hold at 4.35% for the rest of this year. “They (RBA) will be well aware of market pricing and I would expect we’ll get some hawkish warnings from the RBA trying to tell markets not to get ahead of themselves,” said Ben Picton, senior strategist at Rabobank, who expects just one cut this year.”The economy is still growing, albeit at a subdued pace. The labour market is still quite strong…, and when we have asset prices at very elevated levels, that’s sending us the signal financial conditions aren’t actually super tight. So, maybe the RBA has to be a little bit careful about cutting too soon.” More

  • in

    New Zealand warns of ‘significantly slower’ growth over next few years

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – New Zealand will report “significantly slower” economic growth for the next few years when it releases a pre-Budget update in two weeks’ time, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said on Friday, as slower productivity growth hampers the country’s economy. New Zealand’s economy unexpectedly contracted in the third quarter and significant downward revisions were made to economic growth in earlier quarters, leading the market to pull back on bets of further interest rate hikes next year.That, combined with recent data continuing to be weaker than forecast, has led Treasury officials to reassess growth projections for the economy, Willis said. “The numbers haven’t been finalised, but I know enough to say they won’t make happy reading,” Willis said, according to a copy of a speech to business leaders in Auckland on Friday. “Treasury is now warning me that growth over the next few years is likely to be significantly slower than it had previously thought.”In December, New Zealand’s Treasury forecast real annual GDP growth of 1.5% for the fiscal years ending June 2024 and 2025. The weaker growth projections would not lead to cuts to government investment, Willis said.Instead, the government plans to promote growth in several sectors, including space and biomedical engineering, alongside the country’s traditional strengths of farming, fishing and tourism. “With low-growth forecasts bearing down on New Zealand, now, more than ever, we must double-down on the drive for real economic growth,” she said.New Zealand will publish a Budget Policy Statement in two weeks’ time, ahead of a Budget due on May 30. More

  • in

    Japan no longer in deflation, wage hike trend strong, says finance minister

    Policymakers, including Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Suzuki, have repeatedly said in recent days that the country was not yet in a position to be able to declare a solid exit from deflation. The government will mobilise all available policy steps to continue the positive momentum on wages, Suzuki said, declining to comment on Bank of Japan policy steps at its meeting taking place next week. More