The chart below shows the development of various inflation measures for the Eurozone. Headline and core inflation are well known. However, I also calculated a core measure ex administered goods and services. The price changes for administered goods & services are to a large extent directed by the sovereigns and amid the massive fiscal tightening in a large number of countries there has been significant upward pressure on the administered goods prices. Furthermore, I try to deduct also the effects of changes of consumption taxes on prices (Eurostat publishes a constant tax rate HICP). The green line shows this adjusted core inflation measure (i.e. a measure of inflation stripped off the effects of energy&food prices as well as the direct impact of fiscal tightening). This inflation measure stood at 0.4% in January. At that time, core inflation was at 1.3%. Hence, two-thirds of core inflation stemmed from higher prices for administered goods & services as well as higher consumption taxes. On a country level Spain is in outright deflation and France is at 0% inflation according to this measure.
Inflation developments in the Eurozone
Source: Eurostat, ResearchAhead
Looking ahead, price pressures should ease markedly further. First, as headline inflation has been running above the core measures, prices for food & energy continued to exert upward pressure on inflation. However, as the chart below shows, Brent crude oil in Euros has already dropped by approx. 15% since early February and from where they stood a year ago. This is the largest yoy drop in oil prices since 2009 (i.e. at the height of the global financial crisis). Following a spike of approx. 40% last summer, also food prices (measured by the S&P GSCI Agriculture Index in Euros) have now turned negative on a yoy basis. As a result, the inflationary impact of food&energy prices should wane over the next months and headline inflation should fall to (and might even undershoot) the core inflation rate.
Year-over-year %-change of Brent crude oil in Euros
Source: Bloomberg
Growth in M3-M2 suggests easing core inflation pressures
Source: Eurostat, ResearchAhead
As a result, the combination of weaker energy and food prices on a year-over-year basis as well as very high unused capacity and very weak money and loan growth all suggest that core and headline inflation rates should fall markedly over the next few months. Sub 1% inflation rates during summer are very likely and should raise deflation fears.
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