280 likes | 383 Views
Take Five: 5 reasons to worry about UK inflation. Presentation to M&G Inflation Conference London, 4 October 2011. R easons to worry about UK inflation. Inflation performance Global inflationary pressures Sterling Persistent services inflation The MPC.
E N D
Take Five: 5 reasons to worry about UK inflation Presentation to M&G Inflation Conference London, 4 October 2011
Reasons to worry about UK inflation Inflation performance Global inflationary pressures Sterling Persistent services inflation The MPC
UK inflation significantly above target Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum increase in consumer prices index
UK economic growth * Weighted average of manufacturing and services output % per annum change in economic activity
Employment in UK recessions Source: Office for National Statistics, Labour Force Survey Index of employment, 100 = cyclical peak Number of quarters from employment peak
Rebound in nominal demand Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum change in key measures of nominal demand
High inflation squeezing retail volumes Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum growth in retail sales (3-month ave)
Global inflation on the rise % per annum change in consumer prices Source: The Economist
Real oil and commodity prices Source: IMF and Thompson Datastream. Deflated by US consumer price index; 2000=100
Global primary energy consumption Source: BP Statistical Review 2010 Million tonnes oil equivalent
The rise of Asia *: Includes Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan Province of China and Thailand. Source: IMF World Economic Outlook Percentage share of world GDP, current market prices and exchange rates
Shares of world GDP and population *: Apac G10: Asia-Pacific G10, including Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan Province of China and Thailand. Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, World Bank and Eurostat. 2010 figures
Prospects for 2011 and 2012 % per annum change in GDP, latest consensus forecast * US, EU and 11 other major economies making up 85% of world GDP Source: The Economist
World economic growth * EU, US and 11 other economies accounting for 85% of world GDP Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2011, and The Economist % per annum change in GDP in G-13 economies*
The global recovery in context % per annum change in GDP * US, EU and 11 other major economies making up 85% of world GDP Source: IMF and The Economist
Monetary policy, the global economy and inflation Impact of monetary policy Cost of imports Exchange rate Domestic demand Expectations and credibility Global economy Demand UK inflation Pricing climate
Sterling depreciation since 2007 Rebased to 100 in January 2005 Source: Thompson Datastream and Bank for International Settlements *: Effective exchange rate
Episodes of Sterling depreciation Index, base year = 100 Number of years from start of period Source: Bank for International Settlements
Euro/UK inflation differential & exchange rate Source: Thompson Datastream *: Euro-Sterling exchange rate is expressed as the deviation from its average over the same period.
UK goods price inflation Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum change in goods prices
Persistently high services inflation Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum change in consumer prices
Reasons to worry about UK inflation Inflation performance Global inflationary pressures Sterling Persistent services inflation The MPC
Large official inflation forecast errors Source: Bank of England Mean of forecast percentage annual increases in consumer prices
Unemployment in UK recessions Source: Office for National Statistics, Labour Force Survey Unemployment rate, % of labour force Number of quarters from employment peak
Capacity utilisation in UK economy Source: Bank of England Bank of England Agents’ scores relative to normal
Wage growth picking up Source: Office for National Statistics % per annum growth in private sector average weekly earnings
What is wrong with the MPC? Policy-setting no longer consistent with 2% inflation target and mandate MPC seems prepared to inject more stimulus even when inflation is more than double target level Poor forecasting record, yet forecasts critically underpin current policy judgements Benign neglect of the pound No track record of taking tough monetary policy decisions to underpin credibility Dominated by internal consensus around Governor
Conclusions UK inflation performance reflects structural problems in current inflation target regime MPC has used its discretion to redefine inflation target framework post-financial crisis External members cannot effectively counter a strong internal block dominated by the Governor There has been an overt policy of benign neglect of the pound, which has fuelled inflation UK monetary institutions and practice have an inflationary bias – investors beware!