Christine Lagarde: Monetary policy in the euro area
Speech by Christine Lagarde, President of the ECB, at the Bank of
Lithuania’s Annual Economics Conference on “Pillars of Resilience Amid
Global Geopolitical Shifts”, on the occasion of the 10th anniversary
of euro introduction, Vilnius, LithuaniaVilnius, 16 December
2024
It is an honour to be here today to mark 10 years of
Lithuania in the euro.
“Laisvė, Vienybė, Gerovė” – freedom,
unity and well-being. These are core national values in Lithuania –
and accordingly, they are engraved in the edge-lettering on
Lithuania’s €2 coin.
Freedom, because of the liberation from
Soviet occupation. Unity, because of the need for national solidarity.
And well-being, expressing hope for economic and social prosperity.
These three words capture the spirit of the Lithuanian people.
And I believe that being part of the euro has strengthened each of
them.
The country is now an equal partner in setting monetary
policy by one of the world’s most important central banks in the third
largest economy, the euro area. That gives Lithuania freedom in
charting its own macroeconomic destiny that smaller economies cannot
typically claim, who often have to import the monetary policy of their
larger neighbours.
Lithuania now also issues the world’s
second most important reserve and invoicing currency. That provides
unity in the face of a more volatile world, as foreign shocks do not
penetrate the domestic economy as much, owing to domestic currency
invoicing.
Lithuania is especially resilient on this front,
invoicing 78% of its exports to non-member countries in euros last
year, the fourth highest share across the EU.
And being part
of the euro has increased the well-being of the Lithuanian people.
When Lithuania joined the euro area in 2015, GDP per capita in
purchasing power standard terms was around 70% of the euro area
average. By 2023, it exceeded 83%.
But more recently, the
country has dealt with very high inflation, peaking at 22. 5% in
September 2022 – more than double the peak seen in the euro area as a
whole.
This high-inflation episode has led to a pronounced
monetary policy cycle, with the ECB raising rates by 450 basis points,
holding them steady for 9 months, and then cutting rates by 100 basis
points since June as we entered the “dialling back” phase of our
policy.
However, even in this “dialling back” phase, until
recently we retained a restrictive bias in our future policy
orientation. At our last meeting, we dropped that bias.
Today,
I would like to explain what motivated this change and what it implies
for the future.
In a nutshell, we have seen the environment
change in three important ways that increase our confidence that
inflation is returning to our target. These changes concern the path
of inflation, the shocks driving inflation and the risks to inflation.
The path of inflation
The first important change relates to the
path of inflation.
In the earlier part of our monetary policy
cycle, the path of inflation was characterised by high uncertainty. We
consistently saw the return of inflation to target in our projections
being pushed back. At the same time, the incoming inflation data were
surprising on the upside, casting further doubt on the accuracy of
those projections.
ECB staff models using machine learning[1]
indicate that in 2022 and 2023 uncertainty around inflation forecasts
was around four to five times higher than in the long-term average.
This uncertainty about the inflation path had implications for
the policy horizon – that is, the period within which we want to see
inflation converging to our target.
Normally, the medium-term
policy horizon is flexible and can be extended depending on the
nature, size and persistence of the shocks. But if there is a risk of
inflation expectations becoming de-anchored, the horizon must be
shortened to the nearest possible date that monetary policy can take
effect to prevent that risk materialising – which given normal
transmission lags is around two years.
With inflation rising
and its return to target continually being pushed back, at a certain
point we considered that the risk of de-anchoring had become too high.
So, in September 2022 we introduced the notion that the return of
inflation to our target had to be “timely”. Our aim was to fix the
policy horizon and thereby build confidence among the public that
there would be no more delays.
Now, after a lengthy period of
restrictive policy, our confidence that we are seeing a “timely”
return to target has increased.
Since September last year, we
have had six consecutive forecast rounds showing inflation returning
to target in the course of 2025. And this arrival date has stayed
constant even as we have drawn closer to it.
The uncertainty
around these projections has decreased significantly. Our machine
learning models now put the uncertainty bands at close to pre-pandemic
levels.
The incoming data have, over time, validated the path
laid out in the forecasts. Since early 2023, the accuracy of staff
projections has returned to the levels seen pre-COVID, especially for
headline inflation. While errors for core inflation have taken longer
to normalise, this year they have also returned to historical
standards.
And this confidence is confirmed in inflation
expectations. Among households, median expectations for inflation
three years ahead are close to 2%, and market-based indicators of
longer-term inflation expectations have also fallen in recent months.
The shocks driving inflation
The second change in the
environment relates to the shocks driving inflation.
The major
challenge for monetary policy during this cycle is that we have faced
a sequence of very large shocks which – given staggered wage- and
price-setting in the euro area – have transmitted through the economy
in persistent and hard-to-forecast ways.
So, even as our
confidence in our projections increased, we had to be careful in
making our policy stance less restrictive too quickly. We needed a
policy framework that would allow us to better understand this complex
inflation process. That is why we built our reaction function around
our well-known three criteria: the inflation outlook, the dynamics of
underlying inflation and the strength of monetary transmission.
Focusing on the dynamics of underlying inflation allowed us to
extract more robustly the trend in inflation based on the data we
could see in front of us, complementing the information provided by
our forecasts.
And for a given inflation path, assessing the
strength of monetary transmission allowed us to judge whether our
tightening impulse was being passed on through the transmission chain
and was thus effective in steering inflation back towards 2%.
This forward-looking framework has provided a way of
broadening our information set to capture the pace at which a very
large past shock – 10. 6% inflation at its peak – was running its
course, and how our monetary policy stance was transmitting through
the economy and affecting medium-term inflation.
For some
time, the signals from underlying inflation were still flagging the
risk that inflation might not decline as quickly as indicated in our
forecasts. But recently this risk has declined and there is now
greater alignment between our forecasts and underlying inflation.
The width of the range of measures of underlying inflation
that we monitor has narrowed towards its historical average, with most
indicators hovering between 2% and 2. 8%, which we take as an
indicator of receding uncertainty on future inflation dynamics. The
Persistent and Common Component of Inflation (PCCI), which has the
best predictive power for future inflation, has remained at around 2%
since the end of last year.
There is one measure that is still
above this range, which is domestic inflation, capturing items with a
low import content. But this is a year-on-year measures that is made
up 97% of services items, and so it is still registering repricing
events that took place earlier this year that are keeping services
inflation around 4%.
However, if we look at the PCCI for
services, which strips out base effects, the measure currently stands
at 2. 5%. Inflation momentum for services has also dropped steeply
recently. These data suggest that there is scope for a downward
adjustment in services inflation, and thereby domestic inflation, in
the coming months.
Confirming this picture, wage growth –
which is the main cost factor driving services – is on a downward
trajectory and continues to be buffered by negative growth in unit
profits, buffering the pass-through of rising wages to prices.
The ECB wage tracker – which captures wage agreements in seven
euro area countries representing around 85% of total wages in the euro
area – sees wage growth slowing from 4. 8% this year to around 3% in
2025, the level we generally consider to be consistent with our
target. The risks to inflation
The third change in the
environment relates to the risks to inflation.
The fact that
past shocks were expected to travel slowly along the pricing chain
meant that, in recent years, the risks to inflation were mostly to the
upside. And despite the progress we have seen in underlying inflation,
these risks have not disappeared entirely.
The composition of
inflation remains unbalanced, with the recent slowdown being driven
mostly by energy inflation, which is particularly volatile, and
industrial goods. The adjustment process for slower-moving services
inflation is still unfinished. So, we will have to remain watchful
until the downward adjustment in services inflation that we expect is
confirmed by the data.
However, as past shocks fade, the risks
to the inflation outlook have changed. And crucially, these risks are
now related more to potential future shocks than to the transmission
of past ones.
The main downside risks relate to the weaker-
than-expected growth outlook and the increased uncertainty surrounding
growth triggered by geopolitical events.
For some time now, we
have been seeing small sequential downward revisions to the growth
outlook which have cumulatively amounted to a quite significant
downgrade over time. For example, if we go back to our June 2023
projections, we expected average growth of 1. 5% in 2024. Now, we
expect 0. 7%.
One driver of this delayed recovery has been
sluggish export growth, driven by the competitive challenges facing
euro area companies. But the most important driver of our growth
forecast misses has been the domestic economy. In fact, around half of
the misses since end-2021 relate to investment and a quarter relate to
consumption.
The behaviour of investment can be attributed to
a combination of factors, including the stronger-than-expected impact
of higher interest rates, higher energy prices and structural
deterrents. The inertia in consumption has been striking given that
the conditions for a recovery are in place. Employment is historically
high and real incomes are rising. But households continue to save an
unusually high share of their income and take a cautious approach to
spending.
One reason for this caution is that many households
have a perception of their real income growth that is well below
measured data. Just 37% of households in our consumer survey believe
that their real income has risen or stayed the same, even though 50%
of all households have experienced actual increases. And these
households have significantly lower consumption growth than those with
correct perceptions.
This pessimism about real incomes is
largely driven by past inflation, and so in principle it should
dissipate as the high-inflation episode moves further into the
rearview mirror. [2] But increasing geopolitical uncertainty could
create new dents in household sentiment.
In particular, if the
United States – our largest export market – takes a protectionist
turn, growth in the euro area is likely to take a hit. Our exporters
also specialise in capital goods that other countries use for export
production, which makes them particularly sensitive to shifts in
confidence about world trade.
The main upside risks we see in
the future also relate to external shocks. A rise in geopolitical
tensions could push energy prices and freight costs higher in the near
term, while extreme weather events could drive up food prices. The net
effect of trade fragmentation and tariffs on inflation remains
uncertain, as it involves assumptions that are impossible to
anticipate with precision. These include potential retaliatory actions
as well as exchange rate and commodity price movements. Implications
for monetary policy
So what does this changing environment mean
for our monetary policy? There are three main implications.
The first concerns our current policy stance and its future
orientation.
The current policy stance is restrictive. But if
the incoming data continue to confirm our baseline, the direction of
travel is clear and we expect to lower interest rates further.
In terms of the future orientation, we previously said that
“we will keep policy rates sufficiently restrictive for as long as
necessary”. This bias was necessary in an environment of high realised
inflation and high uncertainty about future inflation. But it no
longer reflects the evolving macroeconomic landscape, our outlook for
inflation or the balance of risks around it.
With the
disinflation process well on track, and downside risks to growth, this
bias in our communication is no longer warranted. These considerations
are reflected in the monetary policy statement adopted by the
Governing Council last week. We no longer aim for “sufficiently
restrictive” policy, but rather intend to deliver an “appropriate”
policy stance.
The second implication for monetary policy
concerns our reaction function.
The high-inflation period has
proven the value of the three criteria we have been using to take
decisions, which is why the Governing Council confirmed this policy
framework at last week’s meeting. And these criteria will be
invaluable in the period ahead, even as the risks to inflation move
from past shocks to future ones.
In an uncertain environment,
we will need to continue complementing our baseline outlook with a
rich distribution of possible risks derived from current data. But our
framework is flexible, in the sense that we can change the weight we
put on the different legs of our reaction function depending on the
nature of the shocks we are facing.
For example, if we face
large geopolitical shocks that significantly increase uncertainty
about the inflation projections, we will need to draw on other sources
of data to make the risk assessment surrounding our baseline outlook
more robust.
At the same time, the purpose of monitoring
underlying inflation is to help us differentiate noise in the
inflation data from underlying trends. So, if underlying trends are
not affected, it will help increase confidence in the baseline
projection.
And assessing monetary transmission will continue
to be important, as geopolitical uncertainty may affect monetary
transmission by altering the risk appetite of investors, borrowers and
financial intermediaries.
The third implication concerns the
policy horizon.
Even though we are not there yet, we are close
to achieving our target. So, we are no longer in a situation where we
need to fix the policy horizon at the shortest possible transmission
lag. We can return to a situation where the policy horizon can adjust
depending on the nature, size and persistence of the shocks as needed.
This change explains why we have removed the notion of
“timeliness” from our monetary policy statement, focusing instead on
achieving “sustainable” inflation convergence. And it puts us in the
best position to react to future shocks. Conclusion
Let me
conclude.
The Lithuanian poem “The Seasons” (Metai), written
by Kristijonas Donelaitis, charts the cyclical nature of the rural
life of Lithuanians.
The ECB is also moving through its
monetary policy cycle, and we are now at a stage where the darkest
days of winter look to be behind us, and we can start to look forward
instead.
We certainly hope that the days ahead will be better.
But winds are blowing in different directions and there is much
uncertainty before us.
So, our monetary policy will be
prepared for all scenarios to come.
[This speech was updated
on 16 December 2024 at 11:25 CET to correct the ECB’s June 2023
average growth projections for 2024. ]