EU ministers to discuss inflation surge, EU budget rule reform
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[November 08, 2021] By
Jan Strupczewski
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union finance
ministers will on Monday discuss a surge in consumer prices, its impact
on wages and changes they would like made to the bloc's budget rules to
support investment and reduce debt.
Inflation rose 4.1% year-on-year last month in the 19 countries sharing
the euro, up from 3.4% in September. Ministers are starting to worry
that the rise might fuel stronger wage growth, creating an inflationary
spiral.
"We always expected inflation numbers to pick up this year, but this has
been faster than expected and we see levels we have not seen for a long
time," a senior EU official involved in the meeting said. "The 4.1%
should generate a discussion."
The October surge was mainly driven by a 23.5% jump in energy prices,
which would eventually fall again, though probably not to the levels
before the COVID-19 pandemic, the official said.
"We should come back to more benign inflation numbers, but the process
will be slower than expected and the risk of second-round effects in
wage formation is clearly something that needs to be taken seriously and
monitored," the official said.
The European Central Bank, which is in charge of keeping inflation at 2%
over the medium term, will brief ministers. ECB chief economist Philip
Lane, in comments published by Spanish newspaper El Pais on Monday,
reiterated the bank's message that high price growth is temporary.
"We believe that next year (supply) bottlenecks will ease and energy
prices will decline or stabilise," Lane said. "This current period of
inflation is very unusual, temporary, and not a sign of a chronic
situation."
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President of the European Central Bank Christine Lagarde attends a
Euro zone finance ministers meeting in Luxembourg, October 4, 2021.
REUTERS/Yves Herman
'LONG JOURNEY'
The ministers will start talks on a planned reform of the EU's budget rules to
adjust them to post-pandemic economic realities of high public debt and large
investment needs to fight climate change and support growth.
The rules require annual public debt reduction rates that are too ambitious for
most EU countries. The fiscal framework, which aims to keep budget deficits
below 3% of GDP and debt below 60% to safeguard the euro's value, also provides
little explicit support for government investment.
Euro zone governments are divided over the extent of changes needed. Southern EU
countries are more keen on relaxing debt reduction rules and giving special
status to investment than northern states.
A balance will be needed "between prudent policy and fiscal support for growth",
the official said of discussions that will take most of 2022.
"This is a long journey. We should not try to rush it," the official said.
(Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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