Sluggish growth and high inflation leave ECB in tight spot
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[April 28, 2023] By
Francesco Canepa and Belén Carreño
FRANKFURT/MADRID (Reuters) -The euro zone economy is barely growing but
inflation in the bloc remains high, leaving the European Central Bank
with little choice but to inflict more financial pain on households and
businesses to tame prices.
Buffeted for more than a year by the surge in fuel prices that followed
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, people in the 20 countries that share the
euro are now starting to feel the effects of the ECB's massive increase
in borrowing costs.
Economic output in the euro zone increased by just 0.1% in the first
three months of the year as domestic consumption stagnated in many
economies, a sign that surging inflation and falling real incomes are
taking their toll on consumers.
Growth came mostly from exports, the result of a revival in global trade
as China re-opened for business after the pandemic.
But national data showed price growth remained stubbornly high, probably
leaving the ECB with no choice but to keep raising interest rates.
"Individual country inflation data keeps pressure on the European
Central Bank to remain aggressive on the hiking front at next week's
central bank meeting despite euro-wide growth not that far from
flatlining," said Charles Hepworth, an investment director at asset
manager GAM Investments.
The ECB is widely expected to raise rates for the seventh straight
meeting on May 4, with policymakers weighing another
half-percentage-point (50 basis points) hike against the merits of
slowing rises down to a quarter-point.
Friday's inflation data showed progress was slow.
A slight decline in inflation in large German states pointed to a likely
drop when country-wide figures are published at 1200 GMT. Portugal and
Ireland saw a sharp drop in price growth, too.
Headline inflation rose in France and Spain, however, largely as a
result of some energy subsidies being reduced or phased out. But in a
potential glimpse of sun for the ECB, there were some signs food prices
are easing in both countries.
Surging grocery bills have been a key driver of overall inflation across
the euro zone in recent months, driven by higher fuel costs, unfavorable
weather and some margin expansion by companies.
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Price tags are seen on fruits as a woman
shops at a local market in Nice, France, April 26, 2023.
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
IMF CALLS FOR MORE RATE HIKES
Money markets currently price in another 70 basis points of ECB rate
hikes by October, possibly followed by cuts as early as the start of
next year.
The International Monetary Fund challenged those expectations on
Friday, calling on the ECB to keep raising interest rates until the
middle of 2024.
It also said European Union finance ministers should tighten fiscal
policy in concerted action to bring down high inflation, which would
probably depress consumption further.
But economists said rate increases by the ECB and other central
banks since last year were already likely to curb economic growth in
the coming months, and might even push the euro zone into recession.
"In the second half of the year the massive rate hikes by central
banks worldwide are likely to apply the brake on growth,"
Commerzbank's senior economist Christoph Weil said.
The euro zone's largest economy, Germany, was already stagnating as
a decline in government and household consumption offset an increase
in exports and capital investment.
Southern European economies Italy, Spain and, to a lesser extent,
Portugal were the stand-out beneficiaries of a boost in trade,
growing by 0.3%-0.5% in January to March compared with the last
three months of 2022.
"All the (Spanish) growth comes from the foreign sector given a huge
rebound in exports," Angel Talavera, an economist at Oxford
Economics, said.
(Additional reporting Miranda Murray and Maria Martinez in Berlin,
Andrei Khalip in Lisbon, Geert de Clercq in Paris, Editing by Toby
Chopra and Catherine Evans)
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