Exit game: Central banks' shift from crisis policies gathers momentum
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[August 27, 2021]
By Dan Burns
(Reuters) -While the financial world waits
for the Federal Reserve to start reversing its ultra-loose policy
stance, recent moves by a clutch of other central banks signal the days
of pandemic-era accommodation are already numbered even as COVID-19
continues to impede smooth economic recoveries around the world.
South Korea's central bank on Thursday raised its benchmark interest
rate by a quarter of a percentage point to blunt rising financial
stability risks posed by a surge in household debt, becoming the first
major monetary authority in Asia to do so since the coronavirus
broadsided the global economy 18 months ago.
Even before the rate hike in South Korea, though, central banks in Latin
America and eastern and central Europe had begun lifting interest rates
this year to beat back inflation that is building on the back of
currency fluctuations, global supply chain bottlenecks and regional
labor shortages.
And larger-economy central banks also are getting into the swing. The
Bank of Canada has already cut back on its bond purchases and could
proceed to raise borrowing costs in 2022, and the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand (RBNZ) is expected to lift rates by the end of this year despite
balking at an expected hike last week in the face of a snap COVID-19
lockdown.
For its part, the Fed is lumbering toward tapering its $120 billion in
monthly asset purchases, with an announcement expected before the end of
2021, possibly as early as next month. An actual U.S. interest rate
increase is likely a year or more away, however.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell is set to speak later on Friday on the economic
outlook at the U.S. central bank's annual Jackson Hole summer research
conference, which is being held virtually for the second year in a row.
His remarks may color expectations at the margin for when the Fed makes
its move but are not likely to offer any concrete signal.
THE DIFFERENCE A YEAR MAKES
When Powell spoke at last year's conference - unveiling a new policy
framework that is just starting to be tested - fewer than half of the 22
million U.S. jobs lost to coronavirus shutdowns in the spring of 2020
had been recovered and inflation was running at half the Fed's 2% target
rate. The outlook outside the United States was no less bleak, with
lockdowns still widespread.
The situation in the United States and other economies could hardly be
more different a year later.
The U.S. economy has more than fully recouped all of its lost output,
roughly 9 million more jobs have been regained and inflation is well
above target. Elsewhere, most of the world's economies are back squarely
in growth mode, albeit unevenly so in many cases as COVID-19 outbreaks
fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant trigger localized
lockdowns.
In South Korea, the economy grew 5.9% on a year-over-year basis in the
second quarter, the fastest pace in a decade, and young people are
bingeing on debt and kindling financial stability concerns at the Bank
of Korea. The export-reliant Asian nation's key factory sector expanded
in July for a 10th straight month, even as the Delta variant crimped
manufacturing output for rivals like China, Vietnam and Malaysia.
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Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol speaks during a news conference
in Seoul, South Korea, November 30, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Central Europe's recovery also accelerated in the
second quarter as lockdowns in the region eased. The improvement -
along with an upswing in inflation - has already spurred the Czech
central bank to raise interest rates twice this summer and the
Hungarian central bank to deliver its third hike on Aug. 24, the
first increases across the European Union. Both are expected to
deliver more tightening, and Czech officials are debating if they
need to deliver more than the standard quarter-percentage point
increase.
While the earliest movers have been emerging market countries where
inflation is often aggravated by movements in choppy currency
markets, the gears of tightening are also starting to move in
top-tier economies.
The RBNZ opted not to raise rates last week because of the messaging
complications that would have arisen from such a move alongside a
hastily-called lockdown after the island nation reported its first
local COVID-19 infection in six months. Central bank officials,
however, appear determined to get a rate hike in before the year
runs out.
Meanwhile, Norway's central bank is signaling it will not veer from
its plan for its first rate hike next month despite a recent rise in
infections, putting it on course to be the first of the Group of 10
(G10) developed economies to raise borrowing costs.
"In the committee's current assessment of the outlook and balance of
risks, the policy rate will most likely be raised in September,"
Norges Bank Governor Oeystein Olsen said in a statement last week.
While the Fed and several other G10 banks now appear on course to
start reducing their pandemic accommodation measures this year,
tightening moves by the Fed's two largest peers - the European
Central Bank and Bank of Japan - look much further off.
Still, that doesn't mean they don't see some improvement in
conditions even as the Delta variant spreads.
Japan was among the Asian economies to experience factory sector
growth last month even as COVID-19 cases hit a record high. And a
key ECB policymaker sees only a limited headwind to the euro zone's
recovery due to the variant.
"I would say we're broadly not too far away from what we expected in
June for the full year," Philip Lane, the ECB's chief economist,
told Reuters on Wednesday. "It's a reasonably well-balanced
picture."
(Reporting by Balazs Korayi and Frank Siebelt in Frankfurt, Jason
Hovet in Prague, Krisztina Than in Budapest, Leika Kihara in Tokyo,
Praveen Menon in Wellington, and Cynthia Kim and Joori Roh in
SeoulWriting by Dan BurnsEditing by Paul Simao)
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