The FOMC has started a new tightening cycle and its members project 6 additional increases in the federal funds rate this year and 4 more in 2023. This hawkish stance is unsurprising. After all, the policy rate is very low, inflation is exceptionally high and the economy is strong. Given the Fed’s dual mandate, the pace and extent of rate hikes will depend on the evolution of inflation as well as the unemployment rate. Previous tightening cycles suggest that concerns about the risk of an increase in the unemployment rate have played an important role in the decision to stop hiking. The central bank will have to hope that inflation has dropped sufficiently by the time that this risk would re-emerge.
Economic growth picked up in the first two months of 2022, but this improvement will probably halt in March.In the services sector, growth was 4.2% year-on-year (y/y) in January-February, which is low, yet this figure is higher than the 3.3% reported in Q4 2021. The same observation can be made for retail sales volumes, which rose 4.9% y/y in January-February, up from less than 2% in Q4 2021.
French GDP growth remained positive in early 2022, as illustrated by the relatively stable INSEE’s survey results through February, in terms of households, businesses and employment. Inflation rose significantly in February, up 3.6% y/y, but it was held down by the stability of regulated gas prices and the cap on electricity prices, which rose only 4%. According to the INSEE’s most recent economic update, inflation would have hit 5.1% without these control mechanisms.
After trending downwards since the end of January, Covid-19 figures have been ticking upwards again around the globe: 11.7 million new cases were reported between 10-16 March, a 9% increase over the previous week. This increase is due to the highly contagious Omicron variant and to the easing of health restrictions in several countries. The increase in the number of new cases was especially striking in Asia and Africa, up 15% and 12%, respectively.