There is a widely-shared feeling amongst central bankers, analysts and commentators that the increase of inflation in advanced economies should be transitory. However, this assessment is also subject of intense debate, witness the number of speeches and papers devoted to it.
Raphael Bostic, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, has even added a semantic twist to the discussion. He considers that economists use ‘transitory’ to describe something that is not persistent, but in doing so, the time dimension is lacking. This is an issue when talking about inflation as a central banker or a financial market investor. He advocates calling the recent increase in inflation as episodic. “These price changes are tied specifically to the presence of the pandemic and, once the pandemic is behind us, will eventually unwind, by themselves, without necessarily threatening longer-run price stability.”[1]
Although there is no reference to timing either, the insistence that price changes will unwind by themselves should be reassuring. Isabel Schnabel, executive board member of the ECB, brings a similarly reassuring message by comparing the current inflationary spike to a sneeze. “Chances are high that the current episode of above-target inflationary pressures will subside over time.”[2] However, the IMF insists that inflation prospects are surrounded by great uncertainty, with risks being skewed to the upside.[3] Yet, even in a tail-risk scenario and provided that expectations remain well-anchored, headline inflation in advanced economies would go back to trend by early 2024 after peaking at 4.4% by mid-2022.[4]
In the coming months, more than ever, the data will be scrutinised in order to gauge whether inflation risks are increasing. Investors and central banks will do this in parallel, but the former will react more quickly.
At the risk of oversimplifying, it looks as if, whatever happens, high inflation should be transitory. This is because one-off price shocks drop out of the annual inflation numbers after twelve months, supply bottlenecks do not last and, if required, central banks will tighten policy to cool down demand. Perhaps we should focus more on the risks associated with inflation staying temporarily high for longer.
Several concerns spring to mind :
- One, companies that hitherto have been reluctant to raise prices might do so after all, leading to an ever larger number of goods and services with sizeable price increases. This phenomenon is, to some degree, already observable in the US (chart 1), although not in the Eurozone (chart 2)[5]. Such a broadening could in turn trigger more price increases throughout the value chains.
- Two, through its impact on company profits and households’ purchasing power, this could weigh on investment and personal consumption.
- Three, higher inflation could fuel demand for higher wages, in particular in the presence of labour market bottlenecks. In the US, the latest CFO Survey shows “Seventy-four percent of survey participants report that their companies are having difficulty filling open positions. Among these firms, 82 percent are increasing starting wages – by an average of 9.8 percent – in an attempt to fill these vacancies, and 33 percent are implementing or exploring automation to replace workers.”[6]
- Four, the longer inflation remains high, the greater the risk that it would be considered as permanent rather than transitory. This could cause a gradual unanchoring of inflation expectations, giving an extra boost to price increases and wage demands.
- Five, market sensitivity to inflation data would increase, even if inflation expectations would still be well-anchored. With the rate of price increases having been above target for some time, there could mounting impatience to see inflation moving below target. This increased sensitivity should lead to higher bond and equity market volatility, which in turn can weigh on the real economy.
- Six, market-based inflation expectations might increase, causing a jump in bond yields and, possibly, a drop in equity prices. Finally, there could be increasing concern about a sudden change in the message coming from central banks, i.e. a change in their reaction function. This would cause market turbulence with investors trying to interpret the change in the central banks’ attitude towards inflation.
In the coming months, more than ever, the data will be scrutinised in order to gauge whether risks are increasing. Investors and central banks will do this in parallel, but the former will react more quickly. They anticipate the possible reaction of the central banks. Herd behaviour can play an important role in guessing the central bank’s reaction. Central banks, being afraid of tightening prematurely, will need more data on many more indicators than only prices before they change their mind.