Analysis-Pain of breaking inflation will reverberate around the globe
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[August 29, 2022]
By Balazs Koranyi and Howard Schneider
JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. (Reuters) - The message
from the world's top finance chiefs is loud and clear: rampant inflation
is here to stay and taming it will take an extraordinary effort, most
likely a recession with job losses and shockwaves through emerging
markets.
That price is still worth paying, however. Central banks spent decades
building their credibility on inflation fighting skills and losing this
battle could shake the foundations of modern monetary policy.
"Regaining and preserving trust requires us to bring inflation back to
target quickly," European Central Bank board member Isabel Schnabel
said. "The longer inflation stays high, the greater the risk that the
public will lose confidence in our determination and ability to preserve
purchasing power."
Banks should also keep going even if growth suffers and people start to
lose their jobs.
"Even if we enter a recession, we have basically little choice but to
continue our policy path," Schnabel said. "If there were a deanchoring
of inflation expectations, the effect on the economy would be even
worse."
Inflation is near double-digit territory in many of the world's biggest
economies, a level not seen in close to a half century. With the notable
exception of the United States, a peak is still months away.
The complication is that central banks for the most part appear to have
only limited control.
For one, high energy prices, a function of Russia's war in Ukraine, is
creating a supply shock on which monetary policy has little effect.
Copious spending by governments, also outside central bank control,
exacerbates the problem. One study presented at Jackson Hole argues that
half of U.S. inflation is fiscally driven and the Fed will fail to
control prices without government cooperation.
Lastly, a new inflation regime may be setting in that will keep upward
pressure on prices for an extended period.
Deglobalisation, the realignment of alliances due to Russia's war,
demographic changes and more expensive production in emerging markets
could all make supply constraints more permanent.
"The global economy seems to be on the cusp of a historic change as many
of the aggregate supply tailwinds that have kept a lid on inflation look
set to turn into headwinds," Agustín Carstens, the head of the Bank of
International Settlements, said.
"If so, the recent pickup in inflationary pressures may prove to be more
persistent," said Carstens, who heads a group often called the central
bank of the world's central banks.
All this points to rapid interest rates hikes, led by the Fed with the
ECB now trying to catch up, and elevated rates for years to come.
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People walk past a hot dog stand with a
sign reading "Two hot dogs for 9 Bolivars, or 1 U.S. dollar + 2
Bolivars", in Caracas, Venezuela August 25, 2022. REUTERS/Leonardo
Fernandez Viloria
EMERGING MARKETS
The pain of high U.S. rates will reverberate well beyond the nation's economy
and hit emerging markets hard, especially if high rates prove as lasting as
Powell now signals.
"For the Fed right now – it is crunch time," said Peter Blair Henry, a professor
and dean emeritus of the New York University Stern School of Business.
"The credibility of the last 40 years is on the line, so they are going to bring
inflation down no matter what, including if that means collateral damage in the
emerging world.”
Many emerging market countries borrow in dollars and higher Fed rates hit them
on multiple fronts.
It pushes up borrowing costs and raises debt sustainability issues. It also
channels liquidity to the U.S. markets, pushing up emerging market risk
premiums, making borrowing even more difficult.
Lastly, the dollar will keep firming against most currencies, pushing up
imported inflation in emerging markets.
Bigger countries like China and India appear to be well isolated but a host of
smaller countries from Turkey to Argentina are clearly suffering.
"We have a number of especially frontier economies, and low income countries
that have seen their spreads increased to what we call distress or near distress
levels, so 700 basis points to 1000 basis points," IMF chief economist
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said.
"There is a large number of countries, it's about 60% of the low income
countries, we have about 20 emerging and frontier economies that are in a
situation," he said. "They still have market access, but certainly the borrowing
conditions have worsened a lot."
A monitor by S&P Global now considers the funding risk of lenders in South
Africa, Argentina and Turkey high or very high. It also sees the credit risk of
financial firms high or extremely high in a host of countries, including China,
India, and Indonesia.
"There are a few frontier economies like Sri Lanka, Turkey and so on that are
going to get hammered if the Fed hikes rates and rates stay high," said Eswar
Prasad, an economics professor at Cornell University.
"A two to three year horizon will start making things difficult...If it becomes
clear the Fed is going to keep rates high for a long time, the pressures could
hit home right away,” Prasad added.
(Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Chizu Nomiyama)
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