As the hours wound down before the widely anticipated European Central Bank’s modest 25-basis point interest rate hike, a leading inflation dove had flown into the kind of frenzied fury rarely seen. Even as wearied investors were coping with the Bear’s having snared the Dow Jones Industrials in its razor sharp claws and inflation-squeezed consumers were battered by a fresh surge in the price of crude oil, one inflation dove,
The Telegraph’s Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, was screeching horrific, 'the world is ending,' doom and gloom.
His
column was entitled, “Will Trichet drive the world over a cliff?” In that piece, he wrote, “Sadly, we are witnessing the sort of strategic errors that turned the recession of 1930 into a global catastrophe.” He continued, “The European Central Bank is now hell-bent on a course of action that will have a knock-on effect across the world and risk a dangerous implosion of the credit system.” Afterward, he predicted, “Let me put it differently: there is a grave risk of social and political disorder "exploding" if the logic of his argument is followed to its grim conclusion, that is to say if the ECB charges ahead with a string of rate rises through the autumn after its near certain move to 4.25 per cent on Thursday.”
Later, he charged the ECB with having forced the U.S. Federal Reserve into a tighter monetary posture at a time when “it badly needs to cut rates—perhaps to 1 percent.” Completely ignoring the inflationary reality of the present macroeconomic environment, he even claimed, “We are now in the eye of the post-bubble, debt-deleveraging, deflation storm.”
Not content to argue merely on the merits of a position that has little if any, Mr. Evans-Pritchard even directed an ad hominem attack against Mr. Trichet. “…I might add that Bernanke is one of the greatest economists of our age,” he wrote. No problem there. Some view him more favorably than others. However, Mr. Evans-Pritchard didn’t stop there. He added, “Trichet studied political administration at ENA. He is a fine and honourable man, but he is a politican, not an economic historian.” In other words, Mr. Trichet is unqualified to lead a central bank.
Rather than turning personal against Mr. Trichet, Mr. Evans-Pritchard would do better to consult an economics dictionary.
Deflation is a time of falling prices.
Inflation is a time of rising prices.
The European Union’s Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) shows rising prices. Moreover, the EU’s inflation rate is increasing.
Source: European Central Bank
Worse, such price hikes are spilling into the services industry now. In reality, one is witnessing the dissipation of deflationary housing bubbles in a larger, increasingly inflationary environment.
On Monday, Bank for International Settlements General Manager Malcolm D. Knight observed, “For several years, general price inflation had remained quiescent even though the prices of industrial raw materials and many other commodities were rising strongly. Furthermore, for some time now, world demand seems to have been close to a level that, relative to capacity, eventually produces inflation pressures.” With respect to the arguments peddled by the inflation doves that the current inflationary episode will merely disappear as quickly as it thrust itself onto the world stage with no effort at all by the world’s central banks to combat it, Knight explained, “At present, most forecasters think that the recent rise in headline inflation in industrial countries represents a temporary blip and that, based on current expectations of how monetary policy will react, inflation will fall back in 2009. But we cannot be entirely confident about this reassuring assessment. Forecasters did not expect the successive increases in commodity prices and so underpredicted the present level of headline inflation. And inflation expectations, particularly those indicated by consumer surveys, have edged up significantly in recent months."
In the end, despite the cacophony of the inflation doves notwithstanding—and those economic birds are far from peaceful when it comes to promoting monetary policy that is in harmony with economic realities—the ECB headed by Jean-Claude Trichet is taking a modest and prudent step to keep inflation expectations anchored, mitigate the risk of destructive second-order effects, and reaffirm the credibility of the ECB’s commitment to price stability. It is a modest investment in sustainable real economic growth.
All said, if the larger global economy eventually collapses into recession, the ECB’s 25-basis point hike almost certainly will not be the cause. It is simply too small a change to crash the world’s economies, some of which retain strong growth momentum. More than likely, if bad monetary policy is to blame, those central banks that preserved an overly accommodative stance and later had to tighten far more dramatically than would otherwise have been the case had inflation expectations not become unanchored will have precipitated such an outcome.