OPINION
The European Central Bank — still waiting for
Godot?
As inflation rates hit new records, there’s no time to
wait on forceful actions.
BY OTMAR
ISSING
May 24,
2022 1:53 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/european-central-bank-waiting-godot/
Otmar
Issing is president of the Center for Financial Studies. He is the former chief
economist and member of the board of the European Central Bank.
During the
Great Moderation, a long period of low and stable inflation, continuous growth
and moderate unemployment from the mid-1980s to the financial crisis of 2007,
the risk of higher inflation was entirely off the radar, even in central bank
circles.
Ever since
inflation started to rise well above the 2 percent target in 2021, however,
quite a number of central banks have placed themselves in the “transitory
camp,” expecting inflation to return to prior low levels via self-correction,
so to speak, seeing no need for action to counter the risk of higher inflation.
Until the end of last year, the European Central Bank (ECB) even went so far as
to communicate that, sooner rather than later, it would once again face a
situation of too low inflation, projecting rates would fall below its target of
2 percent — probably one of the biggest forecast errors made since the 1970s.
But the ECB
has been severely underestimating inflation since mid-2021, and even before the
Russian attack on Ukraine, had to repeatedly revise its inflation assessment
upward. And the problem with this underestimation has a deeper source, largely
ignoring that the traditional models are unable to take substantial structural
changes into account.
Any
forecast of inflation is based on assumptions about various exogenous
variables, with oil and other energy prices playing an important role. This is
why the ECB uses the term projections — signaling that the staff bases its work
on assumptions.
But the
pandemic, as a combination of supply and demand shock, entails a persistent
negative shock on output potential and is a major source of structural problems
that had to be addressed by targeted and temporary measures of fiscal policy.
The Federal Reserve System especially, but to some extent also the ECB, has
underestimated the inflationary impact of expansionary fiscal policies.
Now, a
major structural change is taking place at the global level.
When
economists Charles Goodhart and Manoj Pradhan analyzed the main factors that
bring change to the international environment, from a disinflationary impact to
a world were inflationary influences will dominate, demographics were a major
factor, but so was the rise of protectionism. And war in Ukraine will
strengthen the intention to reduce dependency on foreign sources of energy as
well as other essential products in all countries.
But what
are the consequences of these developments for the monetary policy of the ECB?
It is hard
to understand why the ECB has remained in the crisis mode it adopted after the
2007–08 financial crisis for so long. Quantitative easing, with zero or even negative
interest rates and the continued net purchases of bonds, was no longer
appropriate in a period when the economy was improving and unemployment was at
its lowest level since the start of the euro.
Now, facing
inflation rates not seen since the euro’s existence, the ECB has just started
to consider a very late and, as gleamed from announcements, still timid exit
from the monetary policy crisis mode.
It is true
that monetary policy cannot control energy prices and should look through
temporary price shocks — its role is to prevent inflation expectations from
losing their anchor and wages/profits starting an upward trend. The pandemic,
war-induced military spending and other geopolitical crises, expenditures due
to aging populations, and climate policy will all contribute to higher public
spending. This implies a strong risk that debts, having already reached
historically high levels, will increase even further, with consequences for the
sustainability and credibility of public finances in several countries. Efforts
to weaken fiscal rules could further undermine fiscal discipline and contribute
to inflationary pressure.
As a
negative supply shock, the war indicates the risk that the euro area is heading
toward stagflation, and starting to get
out of crisis mode under such circumstances is a big challenge for central
bankers. But, as the experience of stagflation in the 1970s demonstrates,
letting inflation rise uncontrolled is no appropriate option for a central bank
with the mandate priority of price stability.
There is no
more time to wait on forceful actions — Godot will never come.
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