Several meet this week to set policy, including the U.S. Federal
Reserve, the Bank of Japan and Sweden's Riksbank, which all have
turned to government bond purchases as stimulus after running out of
interest rates to cut.
Yet recent easing -- and the halving of oil prices, which was meant
to be a windfall for consumers -- have not changed the global
outlook much, according to Reuters polls of hundreds of economists
published last week.
The Fed shut its quantitative easing (QE) program just over six
months ago. But it seems likely it will be forced to wait until
later this year, instead of June as was expected a short time ago,
before raising rates from record lows.
A disappointing start to the year from another punishing winter and
trade disruption at West Coast ports, together with a rally in the
dollar that is now restraining inflation and U.S. exports, is
chiming a familiar refrain: low rates for longer.
Few expect the Fed to use its two-day meeting as a launching pad for
what will eventually be the first interest rate hike in nearly a
decade. Wages and inflation still are not rising significantly and
even hiring has had a setback.
Many, however, expect the central bank to make it clear in its
policy statement on Wednesday that it is inclined to take the first
solid opportunity it can find to set extraordinarily accommodative
interest rate policy back on a more normal path.
"Further labor market progress, moving to a 'more balanced' outlook
and gaining confidence in the inflation outlook would send clear
smoke signals that lift-off is only shortly ahead," wrote analysts
at BNP Paribas in a note to clients.
What does not appear any more balanced is the global growth picture,
nor does trading behavior in world financial markets. Just this
week, Wall Street re-captured its record high on the Nasdaq struck
during the last technology stock boom.
German stocks have soared more than 20 percent this year in
anticipation of European Central Bank sovereign bond purchases,
which began last month and have hammered the euro and bond yields
about as much as they have boosted share prices.
The euro zone outlook certainly has brightened over the last several
months. But the still-modest growth will not bring down high
unemployment, and the risk remains real Greece, which is running out
of cash to pay its debts, may be forced to default.
ECB data due next week will show whether private lending by euro
zone banks to companies is really on the up.
In Japan, where the central bank has been printing money for about a
decade and a half to escape deflation, questions about the
effectiveness of further aggressive monetary easing there will be on
full display.
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Two years after the authorities ramped up stimulus in a
multi-trillion yen volley to boost inflation, the economy has
escaped a self-imposed recession via a sales tax hike and is now
left with a price outlook very similar to 2013.
"Wage and price-setting behavior have changed little since the
program was launched," wrote Mark Williams, Chief Asia Economist at
Capital Economics, an independent consultancy.
The BOJ is likely to trim its inflation forecast for the current
fiscal year, according to sources familiar with its thinking.
Further stimulus is still likely, but not until later this year,
perhaps in October.
Sweden's Riksbank, which has slashed its main policy rate to below
zero and is conducting asset purchases to ward off deflation but
also has solid growth and soaring house prices and household debt to
contend with.
If that were not enough to at least give the impression to outside
observers that central bankers are not entirely in control of the
economies they oversee, Brazil's central bank meets next week facing
a completely different dilemma.
While most other banks are cutting, including its peers in emerging
markets like China and India, Brazil's central bank is grappling
with an economy in recession and runaway inflation.
Brazil's rate-setting Copom, according to the latest Reuters poll,
is expected to raise by another 50 basis points to 13.25 percent,
already one of the highest key interest rates in the world. [BR/INT]
(Reporting By Ross Finley; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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