EUROPE NEWS
Euro zone inflation hits record 8.6% as the
European Central Bank prepares for its first rate hike in 11 years
PUBLISHED
FRI, JUL 1 20225:03 AM EDTUPDATED FRI, JUL 1 20225:47 AM EDT
Silvia Amaro
@SILVIA_AMARO
- Speaking earlier this week, ECB President Christine Lagarde struck a hawkish tone.
- There are growing questions about the future of monetary policy in the euro zone amid fears of a recession in the coming months.
- Philip Lane, the bank’s chief economist, said the ECB needs to remain vigilant.
- The ECB has announced it will be hiking rates in July and September to counter record inflation.
Germany
surprised many earlier this week when it reported a drop of 0.5 percentage
points in inflation month-on-month. Experts said this was due to new government
subsidies to ease the impact of higher energy prices and it was not yet the end
of surging inflation rates.
But both
France and Spain experienced new inflation records in June with the latter
surpassing the 10% threshold for the first time since 1985, according to
Reuters.
ECB action
The ECB,
which has vowed to tackle the surge in prices, is due to meet in late July to
announce it’s increasing rates. The central bank has said it will hike again in
September, meaning its main interest rate could return to positive territory
this year — the ECB has had negative rates since 2014.
Speaking
earlier this week, ECB President Christine Lagarde struck a hawkish tone.
“If the
inflation outlook does not improve, we will have sufficient information to move
faster,” Lagarde told an audience in Sintra, Portugal, about the period after
that September hike.
However,
there are growing questions about the future of monetary policy in the euro
zone amid fears of a recession in the coming months. If the central bank were
to move quickly in hiking rates, this could hamper economic growth even further
at a time when a slowdown is already underway.
Recent
business activity data suggests that the euro area is already losing steam. The
overall question is whether the euro zone will manage to escape a recession
this year, or if that will come in 2023.
Berenberg
economists forecast an recession in the euro zone in 2023 with a GDP (gross
domestic product) contraction of 0.8%.
However,
further economic pressures from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — most notably
over energy and food security — could tip the region into a more proacted
slowdown earlier than expected.
So far,
European officials have avoided talk of a recession.
“We are
still expecting positive growth rates due to the domestic buffers against the
loss of growth momentum,” Lagarde said earlier this week. The ECB forecast in
June a GDP rate of 2.8% for the region this year. New forecasts will be
published in September.
However,
policymakers in Frankfurt are aware that the economic slowdown is a major risk
they need to monitor.
Philip
Lane, the bank’s chief economist, said it needs to remain vigilant over the
coming months.
“With the
uncertainty, we have to manage the two risks,” Lane, who is also a member of
the bank’s Governing Council, told CNBC’s Annette Weisbach Tuesday at the ECB’s
Sintra Forum.
“On the one
side, that could be forces that keep inflation higher than expected for longer.
On the other side, we do have the risk of a slowdown in the economy, which
would reduce inflationary pressure,” he added.
Speaking in
a flash research note after the data release Friday, Andrew Kenningham, the
chief Europe economist at Capital Economics, said that the 8.6% figure is
“probably not enough to bring a 50bp rate hike (rather than 25bp) back into
play for July.”
“As
policymakers are increasingly uncomfortable with their negative-interest rate
policy we expect to see bigger rate hikes from September, with the deposit rate
rising to +0.75% by year-end,” he said.
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