Eco Week
Editorial

Inflation persistence and why it matters

04/24/2022

Elevated inflation has become widespread. It raises the risk of further price increases because companies may be more inclined to raise prices when most others are doing the same. This would make high inflation more persistent, implying that it would take more time for inflation to converge back to target. Persistently high inflation could weaken the credibility of the central bank and cause an un-anchoring of long-term inflation expectations.

To pre-empt such a development, monetary authorities could decide to tighten policy aggressively. Research by the Federal Reserve shows that US inflation has become more persistent. This helps to understand the increasingly hawkish rhetoric of Federal Reserve officials and their insistence on the need to frontload monetary tightening. The ECB is also monitoring inflation persistence closely. This could mean that, depending on the data, the first rate hike could come sooner after all, even as early as July.

MEASURE OF CORE INFLATION (Y/Y %) IN THE US

Elevated inflation has become widespread. In the US, different measures of core inflation have increased significantly and are all well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target (chart 1). In the Eurozone, the percentage of items of the harmonized index of consumer prices (HICP) with annual inflation above 2% has seen a spectacular increase (chart 2).

There is no indication that this situation will change in the near term. The Federal Reserve’s April beige book mentions that “Inflationary pressures remained strong since the last report, with firms continuing to pass swiftly rising input costs through to customers... Firms in most Districts expected inflationary pressures to continue over the coming months.1

The ECB’s latest monetary policy statement noted that “Energy costs are pushing up prices across many sectors. Supply bottlenecks and the normalisation of demand as the economy reopens also continue to put upward pressure on prices.2 When assessing the implications of these observations, a distinction should be made between broad-based inflation and persistent inflation. The former concerns the number of items in the consumer price index that share a given inflation development.

This number can be high because several shocks occur more or less simultaneously, e.g. commodity price increases alongside supply disruption. To the extent that these shocks are one-off events, their direct impact on inflation should be temporary, even in case of a permanent price increase3. However, in all likelihood, these shocks will also have indirect effects as they are transmitted through the supply chain. This process takes time because not all companies that are facing higher input costs will raise their sales prices at the same time. This staggered price adjustment creates inflation persistence, a phenomenon of inertia whereby the latest inflation data are highly correlated with the pace of price changes in the previous months. It is “the tendency of inflation to converge slowly towards its long-run value following a shock which has led inflation away from its long-run value.”4

EURO AREA INFLATION: PERCENTAGE OF ITEMS* WITH ANNUAL CHANGE OVER 2%

Several factors can explain inflation persistence5. A succession of shocks, persistence in the variables that underpin the inflation process –e.g. a large positive or negative output gap-, staggered price and wage adjustment6 –a phenomenon called intrinsic inflation persistence7- and actions and communication by the central bank. Concerning this last point, research shows that the introduction of inflation targeting has reduced the persistence of inflation.8

What does this concretely mean in the current environment of exceptionally high inflation? Researchers at the Federal Reserve have analysed how much of recent US inflation is persistent and how much is broad-based. They found “that the large ups and downs in inflation over the course of 2020 were largely the result of transitory shocks, often sector-specific. In contrast, sometime in the fall of 2021, inflation dynamics became dominated by the trend component, which is persistent and largely common across sectors.”9

For monetary policy, widespread inflation is important because it raises the likelihood of further price increases –companies may be more inclined to raise prices when most others are doing the same- but persistence is even more important. Persistently high inflation could weaken the credibility of the central bank and cause an un-anchoring of long-term inflation expectations.

To pre-empt such a development, monetary authorities could decide to tighten policy aggressively. This helps to understand the increasingly hawkish rhetoric of Federal Reserve officials in recent months and their insistence on the need to frontload monetary tightening by moving to 50 basis rate hikes, rather than the usual 25 basis points increases. Fed Chairman Powell last week also hinted in that sense.10

As far as the ECB is concerned, the policy approach should be more gradual but it is keeping a close eye on the risk of inflation becoming persistent. “Two-thirds of the inflation we are suffering now is due to energy prices, so it’s imported inflation. Monetary policy can do very little to deal with this kind of inflation. The main risk is that this type of inflation starts to be more and more persistent and gives rise to second-round effects. We need to monitor this very, very closely.”11 Reading between the lines, this means that, depending on the data, the first rate hike could come sooner after all, even as early as July.

Research by the Federal Reserve shows that US inflation has become more persistent. This helps to understand the increasingly hawkish rhetoric of Federal Reserve officials and their insistence on the need to frontload monetary tightening.

THE EXPERT ECONOMISTS WHO PARTICIPATED IN THIS ARTICLE

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