Inflation in the eurozone is different to that in the US, much as ECB president Christine Lagarde insists, but the bloc will still face many of the same headwinds as others, limiting how far price growth can slow.
The ECB put an interest rate cut in June on the table on Friday, arguing that price growth was decelerating towards 2% and the 20-nation bloc was “not the same” as the US, which is struggling with unexpectedly stubborn inflation that may delay interest rate cuts there.
While numerous differences underscore Lagarde’s point, Europe does not exist in a vacuum and problems in the US are bound to make their way across the Atlantic, albeit over time and in a more muted form, economists say.
Two fresh surveys by the ECB published on Thursday reveal the contrast - one suggesting eurozone growth will be barely above zero this year, and another showing the bloc’s biggest firms see contracting investments, workforce cuts and poor retail sales.
This is pushing the long expected recovery further and further out, and even if the economy seems to have bottomed out, the tentative signs of demand and sentiment recovery point only to a gradual and muted rebound.
Annualised growth in the US, meanwhile, was above 3% in the final quarter of 2023 and inflation was driven primarily by demand.
Indeed, goods inflation is just 1.1% in the eurozone and data out of France and Germany on Friday showed that manufactured goods prices lowered the headline figure.
Economists say part of this is due to a rise in cheap imports from China. While trade is rebounding from low levels, monthly import figures show a jump in trade with China in early 2024 and given weak domestic demand, these fresh imports are disinflationary.
In contrast, US consumer demand remains so strong that any fresh import has better pricing power.
Fiscal policy is another key factor in the divergence. While the US government could run a budget deficit of 5.6% of GDP this year with a further increase in 2025, the fiscal impulse in the eurozone is shrinking, with the budget deficit seen down at 2.9% this year before another drop in 2025.
The labour market is also crucial. Eurozone unemployment may be at a historic low, but broader measures of slack which also count underemployment stand at around 11% versus just above 7% in the US.
More importantly, while much of the eurozone’s high employment is a factor of labour hoarding by firms who fear a loss of skilled workers, the US continues to create new jobs much faster than expected.
High interest rates also tend to feed into US housing costs much quicker than in Europe, a key reason why “shelter” inflation is above 5%.
Still, Europe will suffer commodity price increases much like everybody else or possibly even more given that it is a net importer.
Energy has been the biggest drag on inflation this year, but crude oil is up 14% since the start of 2024 and this will start adding to prices in the second half of the year, even as natural gas prices hold broadly steady.
In addition, expectations of faster eurozone rate cuts have already weakened the euro, and this raises the prices of imported goods, thereby lifting consumer prices.
Weakening labour productivity could also add to Europe’s inflation since it means greater unit labour costs that must eventually find their way into consumer prices.
Nevertheless, the divergence is clear and the ECB will be able to lower interest rates before the Fed, even if it will be buffeted by the same headwinds, limiting its ability to go it alone. - Reuters
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