This is indeed the key question in the coming months for markets, households, companies and indeed the ECB, because it will determine whether inflation expectations can re-anchor at a higher level. As emphasised by Mario Draghi during the press conference, these expectations didn’t become unanchored, they re-anchored at too low a level compared to the ECB’s inflation aim.
Theoretically, and given the current environment, some scepticism is warranted and this was discussed in earlier contributions[2]. In addition, although the current policy should have positive effects in the aggregate, concern about the negative side effects is on the rise: overheated property markets in certain countries; negative rates impact pension funds and insurance companies; certain households may decide to save more and spend less considering that, when bond yields are low to negative, wealth accumulation depends on the amount of saving, rather than on the reinvestment of, what has become in yield terms, a meagre financial income.
The repeated insistence by the ECB President on side effects was one of the surprises of the press conference and shows monetary policy is approaching the end of the road. The other surprise was that he and his colleagues of the Governing Council are basically passing the baton to fiscal policy: “There was unanimity that fiscal policy should become the main instrument to support growth”, “It’s high time for fiscal policy to take charge”, “If fiscal policy is appropriate the monetary package will be effective more quickly”.
In a way there is something tragic about it: as explained by the ECB president, monetary policy has played a crucial role in creating an environment leading to 11 million new jobs. It has also led to a solid increase in wage growth as the unemployment rate declined. The final step however hasn’t really materialised: the transmission of faster wage growth into higher inflation has been interrupted because of the negative demand shock coming from China and international trade; tariff uncertainty; Brexit uncertainty. Fiscal policy is then requested to step in, at least in these countries which have leeway, that is fiscal space. We now have to see whether the call will be heard.