In countries where restrictions on mobility are lifted, demand picks up suddenly, causing an imbalance with supply, which takes more time to react, in particular when value chains are long and complex. In recent months, companies have been reporting longer delivery lags and rising input costs, but the historical experience in the US and the euro area shows that the impact on inflation should be temporary and limited. Nevertheless, in bond markets, break-even inflation has increased significantly in recent months, reflecting investor worries about the risk of upside surprises to inflation. Should supply-side pressures ease in coming months, one would expect break-even inflation to decline as well.
Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and the introduction of health protection measures, we have been stressing that only a swift and broad vaccination campaigns would allow economies to return to normal. This is what we are now seeing in most European countries.
According to the latest PMI numbers and economic data, growth in the Chinese economy has remained solid in the early part of Q2 2021, boosted in particular by exports. Activity in the domestic market lost a bit of steam in April, but is expected to bounce back again in the short term.
The Covid-19 pandemic continues to slow around the world. As health protection measures are gradually relaxed, footfall to retail and leisure facilities continued to rise in the main developed economies.