Top 5 Economics Graphs of the Week - 19 March 2011
This week the focus is on inflation as we review some of the latest inflation
data from a selection of key economies. First we look at a revival in US
inflation, then review the situation up in Canada, then we look at the inflation
situation in the Euro Zone, before finishing up with a look at the BRIC
economies. Following that is a review of some of the key monetary policy
decisions over the past week.
1. US Inflation
The US recorded annual headline inflation
of 2.2% in February, up from the 1.7% rate seen in January (up 0.5% month on
month). Core inflation also continued its climb, rising to 1.1% from a low of
0.6% in October last year. The key driver of the rise in headline inflation was
commodity prices, but specifically energy prices - with energy up 11% (no
surprise given the recent run up in oil prices). The main takeaway from the
result was a confirmation that the inflation situation in the US is starting to
see greater inflationary pressures due to the transmission of rising commodity
prices. The base
case still seems to be one of higher or normalized inflation, but with a
possibility of lower inflation or deflation if commodity prices drop back - but
then you can't count out even higher inflation either - especially if the
recovery really starts to gain traction and momentum.
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2. Canada Inflation
To the north in Canada inflation came in at 2.2% for the 12-months to February
(up 0.3% month on month), slightly lower than the 2.3% seen in January. The main
driver of inflation in Canada has been energy costs, with gasoline prices up
15.7%, but the transportation component also tracked upwards, rising 5.1% from
February, and alcohol and tobacco rising 2.7%. The core inflation figure in
February was 0.9%. Thus the trends are relatively similar to that of the US,
with commodity prices driving up inflation, but also a gradual rise in aggregate
demand. The Bank of Canada has remained in pause mode after hiking rates three
times last year, it is reasonably likely that the Bank may begin to recommence
the monetary policy normalization process later this year.
3. EU Inflation
The EU recorded inflation of 2.4% in February, up from 2.3% in January, with the
broader region recording 2.8% inflation, unchanged from January. EU core
inflation came in at 1% after hovering around the 1-1.1% mark for the past few
months. The lowest annual rates came from Ireland (0.9%), Sweden (1.2%), and
France (1.8%), with the highest rates seen in Romania (7.6%), Estonia (5.5%),
and Bulgaria (4.6%). The key contributors were housing (up 4.9%), transport (up
5.7%), and alcohol and tobacco (up 3.5%). As noted by the ECB
when it put its tough stance on inflation forward in its latest meeting,
inflation is tracking up in the Euro Zone, and it is primarily being driven by
commodity prices - rather than by a significant improvement in aggregate demand.
The ECB is concerned about second round effects on core inflation, and
rightfully so.
4. BRIC Inflation
Looking abroad to the major emerging market economies, the BRIC (Brazil, Russia,
India, China)
economies have seen inflation rise to much higher levels than their developed
market counterparts. Sure, on average the BRIC economies have a higher weighting
to food prices in their indices (and rightfully so), so some of the high
inflation is a result of last year's surge in agricultural commodity prices. But
unlike the developed markets, the BRIC economies have broadly experienced pretty
strong economic growth, so the aggregate demand side of the equation is having a
significant effect on inflation too. This of course gives rise to policy risk
for those markets, with India and China both announcing further monetary policy
tightening moves last week.
5. Monetary Policy Review
The main events in monetary
policy over the past week were: India increased rate +25bps to 6.75%, Chile
increased +50bps to 4.00%, and Colombia increased +25bps to 3.50%, Japan
expanded its asset purchase program another 5 trillion Yen in response to the
unfolding natural and nuclear disasters, and China raised the required reserve
ratio another 50 basis points - placing the rate at 20% for the larger banks. So
for the most part it was the same old story of emerging market economies raising
rates in response to higher inflation. But, some of the Banks like Norway and
Switzerland made comments about the need to normalize policy in the near term...
in other words more and more central banks are starting to talk about rising
inflation, so this may well be the part where we start to see inflation as a
global theme rather than an emerging market theme.
Summary
So we saw the US with rising headline and core inflation, showing that
inflationary pressures are well entrenched for now. Up in Canada, inflationary
pressures were likewise tracking along, likewise driven by the surge in
commodity prices - but particularly energy prices. Over in the EU, the ECB's
comments on inflation were confirmed by higher headline inflation, and it is
right to worry about the second round effects of rising commodity prices. In the
BRIC economies, the distinction is made that inflation is not just a supply side
- commodities thing, it is also an aggregate demand thing. Thus we continued to
see monetary policy tightening by emerging market central banks, but we also
started to see greater vigilance on inflation from developed market central
banks. So the question arises; has inflation now progressed from an emerging
market theme to a global theme?
Sources
1. Bureau of Labour Statistics www.bls.gov
2. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
3. Eurostat epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu
4. Trading Economics www.tradingeconomics.com
5. CentralBankNews.info www.centralbanknews.info
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/top5graphs19mar11.html
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