Low Inflation Worries Continue To Challenge Fed Tightening

 | Oct 01, 2017 02:19AM ET

The US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) surprised markets two weeks ago when it maintained its projection for another rate hike in 2017 and three additional hikes in 2018. In contrast, the market was predicting just one more hike over both the remainder of 2017 and all of 2018. The discrepancy between the Fed and the market rests on diverging views of inflation which has been on a downward trend for most of 2017. The Fed believes weak inflation is temporary and will to rebound to its 2% target in 2018. On the other hand, market sceptics view subdued inflation more as a product of long-term structural trends which are unlikely to be so quickly overcome. We expect the Fed to hike three times between now and the end of 2018as structural factors continue to keep inflation below target while the temporary factors currently supressing inflation unwind.

There are three main structural explanations for low inflation. First, increased globalisation has resulted in greater competition and integrated production of goods and services which has pushed down costs and retail prices for global consumers. Research from the Bank of International Settlements has shown that the impact of globalisation on domestic inflation is gradual and can last for several years. This implies that although the pace of globalisation has abated in recent years, the pass through of cheap foreign labour costs, greater competition and more efficient production could still be weighing on inflation in the US today.

Second, the emergence of e-commerce has increased retail competition through greater transparency and lower costs. An estimated 8% of US retail sales are conducted online and digital price indices reveal lower prices across a wide range of goods categories in comparison to equivalent categories in official consumer price indices. Therefore, prices are also likely being depressed by increasing online retail sales.

Third, wage growth has been dampened by declining bargaining power of workers resulting in lower inflation. This has been driven by the consolidation of firms into ever larger ones, the decline of unionisation and slower productivity growth.In the past, workers value added grew at faster rate and were more effective in bargaining through unionisation with smaller firms, resulting in faster wage growth, and therefore higher inflation.

Core PCE Inflation (% year on year)