Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Central bankers on the move, but where’s the inflation

1152612
1152612
minus
plus

LONDON: Now the Bank of England (BoE) has raised interest rates for the first time in a decade, it is beyond doubt major central banks in industrialised economies are eager to shift away from ultra-easy policy. But the fact the decision was so contested both in and outside the BoE perhaps reveals more concern about the lack of inflation pressure than about Britain’s clear difficulty in trying to leave the European Union without a concrete plan.


The majority of those who argued against higher rates in Britain started with the fact above-target inflation is a result of sharply higher import prices due to the tumble in the pound since the June 2016 vote to leave the EU.


A lack of domestic inflation pressure from higher wage deals remains as plain as ever, as does the ongoing lack of inflationary drift from the global economy, where trade is down from boom years but cheap labour remains plentiful.


Among those who carefully follow Britain’s peers in the Group of Seven industrialised economies, notably the United States and those in the euro zone, the lack of inflation is real and striking, corroborated by a recent Reuters poll of over 500 forecasters around the world.


News that Jerome Powell will be taking over as Federal Reserve chair from Janet Yellen does nothing to change the fact core inflation on the central bank’s preferred measure has fallen back to 1.3 per cent. That is where it was the month before the Fed started raising rates nearly two years ago.


The Bank of Canada has delivered two interest rate hikes this year — the July one more of a surprise than the follow-up in September — but growth has since flatlined and there’s no sign of core inflation picking up there either.


Led by President Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank has just skillfully engineered a broad acceptance January is the right time to slash its monthly asset purchases by half to 30 billion euros. But core inflation is still going nowhere fast.


The ECB even has a “core core” measure it looks at that strips out a litany of pesky components holding inflation down, and even that is not offering much encouragement.


Japan, like the euro zone, is experiencing one of its best economic years in the past two decades, drifting up with the rest of the global economy but also showing impressive domestic performance and more reason for hope for the future.


But its notable recent improvements in raising wage settlements a bit still does not look like they will bring inflation much higher.


The Bank of Japan’s latest meeting had a newcomer arguing for more easing, a crack in the armour that leaves a rather uncomfortable question lingering in the air.


If Japan still hasn’t escaped from two lost decades of near-zero pricing power, even after the authorities have thrown the kitchen, bathroom and garage sinks at it, isn’t the logical conclusion that central banks aren’t in control of inflation — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon