Euro zone's employment record complicates life for ECB
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[February 14, 2023]
BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Euro zone employment surged more than
expected to a new record high last quarter as a surprisingly resilient
economy avoided a recession, pointing to greater underlying inflation
pressures that could keep interest rates high for longer.
The euro zone economy was expected to contract through the winter months
but falling energy prices, a mild winter and unexpected flexibility in
the economy propped up confidence, limiting damage for a bloc that still
faces a difficult 2023.
Growth in the 19 countries sharing the euro at the end of 2022 expanded
0.1% quarter-on-quarter for a 1.9% year-on-year rise, in line with a
preliminary estimate on Jan 31, Eurostat said on Tuesday.
But the real surprise was employment, which expanded by 0.4% on the
quarter, twice as fast as expected in a Reuters poll, pushing the total
number of workers to 165 million. Compared to a year earlier, employment
growth was 1.5% in the final quarter of 2022.
Quick employment growth highlights just how tight the labour market is
and signals a problem for the ECB in its fight to bring inflation back
to 2% from double digit territory last autumn.
A recession was expected to boost the jobless rate, cooling the labour
market and keeping a lid on wages. But firms, which struggled to rehire
workers after the pandemic, appear to be hanging onto staff even through
a downturn.
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The skyline of the banking district is
pictured in Frankfurt, October 21, 2014. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski
"The resilience of employment growth will aggravate the ECB’s
worries about second round effects on inflation and reinforce the
push for an extension of the hiking cycle beyond March,” said Ken
Wattret, an economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Wage growth was already expected to exceed 5% this year, the highest
in years, adding to underlying price pressures, particularly in
services where wages are the biggest cost.
While such a growth rate still signals a drop in real earnings given
rapid inflation, some policymakers fear that it could be difficult
to temper nominal wage demands once inflation declines, especially
since workers lost a large chunk of their real incomes last year.
"The surprisingly large increase in employment in Q4 last year is
the latest illustration of the euro zone’s remarkable resilience in
the face of various headwinds," Wattret added.
While overall growth in 2023 is still likely to be weak, the
European Commission on Monday raised its growth forecast to 0.9%
from 0.3%.
(Reporting by Jan Strupczewski and Balazs Koranyi; editing by Philip
Blenkinsop and Christina Fincher)
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