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The Terrible Twins Inching The ECB Toward QE

Published 01/09/2014, 12:17
Updated 11/01/2018, 15:15

The Eurozone recovery, already anaemic, has run out of steam without much impact on the region’s unemployment rate. Joblessness in the Eurozone equals more than half of Spain’s population.

And with inflation falling further in August, the European Central Bank may finally be prepared to provide an appropriate response.

Idle Hands

The Eurozone's economic woes are most clearly and painfully manifested in the region's unemployment rate, which stood at 11.5% in July. The fact that it's fallen from 11.9% in July 2013 provides small comfort for either the 25 million Eurozone jobless currently looking for work, or officials charged with rejuvenating Europe's many moribund economies.

High unemployment hurts both the public and private sectors.First, by worsening already stretched public finances as high unemployment means lower tax receipts and higher welfare payments. Second, because there’s less money for consumption spending or desire for business investment.


A helping hand?

Weak demand brought about by high unemployment has helped slow the rate of inflation in the Eurozone, which fell further to just 0.3%y/y in August - a figure that’s too low for comfort. Falling prices would raise the real cost of debt and give consumers an incentive to delay spending because they think prices might be lower in future than now.

Given the terrible twins of high unemployment and deflation fears, it is no wonder that Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank, appears to be inching toward mimicking his central bank counterparts by adopting quantitative easing.

More slack?

The Bank of England has regularly spoken of its surprise at the amount of ‘slack’ in the labour market. One possible explanation is the pick-up in net migration (immigration minus emigration). Net migration was 220k in the year to March and it’s been on an upward trend since late 2012, coinciding approximately with the UK’s economic upturn.

So, it could be contributing to the current low inflation environment. At the least, it’s something the Bank of England will likely be mindful of as it deliberates when to hike rates.

Food for thought

UK house prices continued to increase at a robust pace in August, up 11%y/y according to Nationwide. And this is happening despite a fall in the number of mortgage approvals. Latest figures show that there were 43k approvals in July - a pick-up on April and May, but fewer than in the first three months of the year.

However, unless house price growth slows considerably and earnings growth rises, the Financial Policy Committee’s limits on higher loan to income lending will start to take effect sooner than in mid-2015, the Bank of England’s central forecast. And if it does, it will be London and the south that will most likely feel the pinch. Both regions have average loan to income ratios well in excess of the UK average.

Better

US GDP grew by 4.2% in Q2, a little higher than the initial estimate of 4.0%. Over the first half of the year as a whole, growth was a disappointing 0.5%, with Q1 affected by bad weather. Investment was the strongest performer in H1, up 2.4% with factory and office construction leading the way. Exports continued to struggle, falling slightly. Looking ahead, the expectation is for the US to stay in recovery mode in the coming quarters.

Soft landing?

US house prices are still rising quickly but the rate of inflation has slowed markedly this year. According to Case Shiller, prices were up 6.2%y/y in June. Six months earlier inflation had been running at an unhealthy 11%.

This is consistent with the gradual increase in housing supply in H1 which has been sufficient to blunt the effects on prices of rising demand. Could the US be about to pull off a rare trick and see a housing price bubble slowly deflate rather than burst?

Not budging

US personal consumption inflation was unchanged in July at 1.6%y/y, but this stable headline obscured two underlying trends. Much of this inflation is coming from the services side of the economy, where prices are currently rising at 2.2% a year.

The cost of goods is going up much more slowly and the cost of durable goods, such as household appliances, is actually falling. The $1.3trn Americans spend on durables this year will get them even more bang for their buck.

Emerging more slowly

India’s economy grew by 5.7%y/y in Q2, the fastest pace since early 2012. At last the country may be beginning to put its recent slowdown behind it. But there’s a lot of work for the new government to do to get growth back up to the 9% plus growth seen pre-crisis. Asia’s other growth stars have also experienced a slowdown. Indonesia grew by 5.1% in Q2. Back in 2011 it was growing by 6.5%.

The good news is to be found in the Philippines. A much-needed bout of investment has helped propel growth to a multi-year high with the economy growing by 6.4%y/y in Q2. And these economies increasingly matter. The combined size of the Philippines and Indonesian economies is almost the same as Italy.

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Whilst this information is believed to be reliable, it has not been independently verified by RBS and RBS makes no representation or warranty (express or implied) of any kind, as regards the accuracy or completeness of this information, nor does it accept any responsibility or liability for any loss or damage arising in any way from any use made of or reliance placed on, this information. Unless otherwise stated, any views, forecasts, or estimates are solely those of the RBS Economics Department, as of this date and are subject to change without notice.

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