To some
it all seems very strange. The Eurozone is in recession, and no one is doing
anything about it. The ECB are keeping
interest rates at 0.75%, and there are no plans for Quantitative Easing. It is
possible to speculate on possible factors here, but there is one obvious answer.
Consumer price inflation is expected to be pretty close to 2% this year and
next in the Eurozone as a whole. So with inflation on target, what is there to
do?
Now I think there are strong grounds, familiar
to anyone who has studied economics, for saying that monetary policy is not
just about current inflation, but should be about closing the output gap
as well. The OECD in June estimated that the Euro area output gap will be between
-3.5% and -4% in 2012 and 2013. However monetary policy makers in the UK as
well as the Euro area (and, until recently, the US) appear to be just looking
at inflation. Textbooks will have to be rewritten.
Euro Area Inflation Forecasts
Consumer Prices
|
|
2012
|
2013
|
|
2.3%
|
1.6%
|
|
|
OECD June
|
2.4%
|
1.9%
|
GDP deflator
|
|
|
|
|
IMF October
|
1.5%
|
1.4%
|
|
OECD June
|
1.2%
|
1.6%
|
Compensation per employee
|
OECD June
|
1.7%
|
1.7%
|
But which inflation measure should they focus on? The standard
answer is consumer prices. However there is nothing in economic theory which
suggests that this should be the only inflation measure that matters. Indeed, a
convincing case
can be made that a better indicator of the costs of inflation is a measure of
output prices, such as the GDP deflator. As the Table shows, output price
inflation is expected to be well below 2% both this year and next. (The change
in the GDP deflator is not on average significantly less than CPI inflation.)
Furthermore, wage inflation, which is normally significantly greater than
either measure of price inflation, is also expected to be below 2%.
A major reason why CPI inflation is above these other
measures of inflation is commodity prices. Of course commodity price inflation
is largely outside the control of the ECB. But what the ECB is effectively
doing, by focusing on the CPI, is saying that non-commodity price inflation has
to be below 2% to compensate for rises in commodity prices. Once again, there
is no obvious theoretical reason why that is a sensible thing to try and
do. In some
Eurozone countries CPI inflation is high because of VAT increases – again it
makes little sense for monetary policy to react to this.
So the ECB is not only ignoring the output gap, but it is
also ignoring any inflation measure except the CPI. Is this just an unfortunate
consequence of the public focus on this measure of inflation? I wonder what
would happen if the reverse was the case. Imagine if CPI inflation was at 2%,
but other inflation measures were well above, and there was a large positive
output gap. Would the ECB be doing nothing in that case?
The news on fiscal policy is equally depressing, and even
more predictable (see the final section of this).
The public discussion is not about whether further austerity is appropriate. Instead
it is whether countries are undertaking enough fiscal contraction to avoid the sanctions
that are part of the Eurozone’s excessive deficit procedures (see Bruegel here).
The problem is not only the actions of politicians but also the views of those
who advise them. It is as if officials have spent the last ten years in a
losing battle to restrain public deficits, and they are not going to give up
now just when things are going their way. Spiegel
(HT MT) reports that Angela Merkel’s government has proposed some very minor
fiscal easing, but this has been met by stern disapproval from the country’s Council of Economic Experts.[1]
What we
seem to have here is a collective failure of the European governing class. It
is a governing class that is much less accountable than in, for example, the
United States. While there has been understandable discussion, and some
progress, on further economic integration (banking and fiscal union) in the Eurozone, I worry
about the wisdom of moves that give further power to a governing elite that has
failed, and continues to fail, in such a spectacular manner. (Acemoglu and
Robinson, Amartya
Sen and Niamh
Hardiman express similar concerns.) Is there a danger that economists, with the
best of intentions, are helping to dig a deeper hole for the Eurozone because
they are failing to see the bigger political picture?