ECB confronts a cold reality: companies are cashing in on inflation
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[March 02, 2023] By
Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Huddled in a retreat in a remote Arctic village,
European Central Bank policymakers faced up last week to some cold hard
facts: companies are profiting from high inflation while workers and
consumers foot the bill.
The prevailing macroeconomic narrative over the past nine months has
been that sharp increases in prices for everything from energy to food
to computer chips were ramping up costs for companies in the 20
countries that make up the euro zone.
The European Central Bank (ECB) responded by raising interest rates by
the most in four decades to cool demand, arguing it faced the risk that
higher consumer prices would push up wages and create an inflation
spiral.
But at the retreat in the Finnish village of Inari intended to give the
bank's Governing Council a chance to delve into themes only touched upon
at regular meetings, a slightly different picture emerged, three sources
who attended the meeting said.
Data articulated in more than two dozen slides presented to the 26
policymakers showed that company profit margins have been increasing
rather than shrinking, as might be expected when input costs rise so
sharply, the sources told Reuters.
An ECB spokesperson declined to comment for this story.
"It's clear that profit expansion has played a larger role in the
European inflation story in the last six months or so," said Paul
Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management. "The ECB has
failed to justify what it's doing in the context of a more
profit-focused inflation story."
The idea that companies have been raising prices in excess of their
costs at the expense of consumers and wage earners is likely to anger
the general public.
But it has implications for central bankers too.
Inflation fuelled by higher corporate margins tends to self-correct as
companies eventually put the brakes on price rises to avoid losing
market share, making it a very different beast to tame than a wage-price
stampede.
So a new inflation narrative focused on margins could give the more
dovish members of the Governing Council some ammunition to fight against
further rate rises after their resistance proved largely futile over the
past year, according to economists interviewed by Reuters.
The debate is due to resume at the ECB's next policy meeting on March
16, when the bank has promised to raise rates to their highest level
since the height of the financial crisis in 2008.
CHANGE IN NARRATIVE
The received inflation narrative in the euro zone has been slowly
starting to shift.
Businesses are anticipating smaller price rises as the outlook for costs
and demand becomes less clear, according to surveys published by the ECB
and Germany's Ifo institute.
Some European countries such as Greece have tabled measures to curb
inflation in essential goods while France and Spain are debating similar
steps.
"The economics of profitability suggest we might see more of a profit
squeeze coming up," ECB chief economist Philip Lane told Reuters.
"European firms know that if they raise prices too much, they will
suffer a loss in market share."
In the United States, the profit margin expansion started earlier and
has already started to reverse, albeit slowly and unevenly.
But unlike the United States, there is no official corporate margin data
for the euro zone. Instead, national accounts and earnings reports from
listed companies are being used as proxies to paint the inflation
picture.
Euro zone consumer good companies, for example, boosted operating
margins to an average of 10.7% last year, up by a quarter over 2019,
before the global pandemic and the war in Ukraine, Refinitiv data shows.
The 106 companies included in the survey ranged from French resort owner
Pierre et Vacances to carmaker Stellantis to luxury goods group Hermes
and Nordic retailer Stockmann.
Similarly, profits rather than labour costs and taxes have accounted for
the lion's share of domestic price pressures in the euro zone since
2021, according to ECB calculations based on Eurostat data.
DETACHED DISCOURSE
Indeed, wages have been growing far more slowly than inflation, implying
a 5% drop in the standard of living for the average employee in the euro
zone compared with 2021, according to ECB's calculations.
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Signage is seen outside the European
Central Bank (ECB) building, in Frankfurt, Germany, July 21, 2022.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
That's pretty much the opposite of the wage-led inflation that
characterised the 1970s, an era which has become the most widely
used point of comparison in the public debate about appropriate
central bank policy responses, economists say.
"The public discourse to some extent is detached from what's
actually happening out there," said Philipp Heimberger, an economist
at the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies. "The
main story of the risks going forward is still that there's a
looming wage-price spiral which should make the central bank even
more aggressive in hiking interest rates."
For example, wages were mentioned 14 times in ECB President
Christine Lagarde's latest news conference while margins didn't get
a single mention. Her deputy, Luis de Guindos, also warned that the
ECB needed to be careful because labour unions might demand
excessive pay rises.
"You see a very clear reluctance to discuss profit," Daniela Gabor,
a professor of economics and macro-finance at the University of West
England in Bristol. "That illustrates that the distributional
politics of inflation targeting is: You don't go for profits; you
don't go for capital."
In the United States, the issue of runaway margins has been raised
by former Federal Reserve Bank vice-chair Lael Brainard, who is now
President Joe Biden's top economic adviser, and Democratic senators
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.
Even inside the ECB, labour representatives demanding higher pay for
central bank staff have distanced themselves from what they
described as the institution's "anti-worker bias".
They cited, among others, a paper by researchers at the
International Monetary Fund showing that accelerating wages have not
historically led to a wage-price spiral.
PROFIT VS WAGES
ECB policymakers gathered in Finland went through similar data sets
showing that profits had outpaced wages thanks to savings built up
during lockdowns being spent, but also because of companies' power
to set prices, the sources said.
With those savings now being depleted and competition returning,
things may be changing for ECB policymakers who have been calling
for a redrafting of the inflation narrative.
In January, Portuguese central bank governor Mario Centeno was among
the first to warn about the risk of a very clear increase in profit
margins, saying it should be brought up the European policy agenda.
ECB board member Fabio Panetta later said workers had borne the
brunt of the surge in prices while, on balance, company mark-ups had
remained stable, or even increased in some sectors.
Wages are accelerating, with the ECB's forward-looking wage tracker
anticipating a rise of nearly 5% in 2023 for contracts signed in the
last quarter of 2022. But that won't offset the massive drop in real
wages over the past year, analysts said.
"A key missing ingredient is the bargaining strength of the labour
movement, which is structurally weakened by the disinflation
policies of the 1980s and the ensuing liberalisation of labour
markets," said Mattias Vermeiren, a professor of international
political economy at the Ghent Institute for International and
European Studies.
During the last inflation crisis in the 1970s, nearly 70% of
economic output went to employees, with just over 20% going to
profits, according to Eurostat data. Now, labour's share stands at
56% with a third going to profits.
The ECB policymakers went over those differences at their Finnish
retreat, though their tentative conclusions were dotted with
caveats, the sources who attended the meeting said.
Some argued that furlough schemes during the pandemic may buttress
incomes, the sources said, and that a sustained period of high
inflation may raise salary demands in a way that models developed
during periods of stable prices fail to predict.
And the interest rate doves might have their work cut out after data
showed inflation in France, Spain and Germany exceeded expectations
last month.
(Additional reporting by Balazs Koranyi, Chris Steitz, Philip
Blenkinsop, Victoria Klesty, Joanna Plucinska and Thomas Leigh;
Editing by David Clarke)
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