In my speech “Finding the right mix: monetary-fiscal interaction at times of high inflation” at the Bank of England Watchers’ conference I explained why I see a risk that monetary and fiscal policies are pulling in opposite directions, leading to a suboptimal policy mix. 1/19
In the recovery from the pandemic, demand started to outpace supply, putting upward pressure on prices. This was reinforced by a surge in energy and food prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Inflation broadened substantially, pushing up underlying inflation. 2/19
These price pressures are unlikely to dissipate quickly. Accumulated excess savings remain significant in both nominal and real terms. Firms in the manufacturing sector continue to have full order books. Unemployment rates remain at record low levels. 3/19
Moreover, the pandemic and the energy crisis may have more permanent negative effects on potential output. Potential output growth is constrained by labour scarcity. The pandemic has led to lower labour participation in sectors where it is hard to work from home. 4/19
The energy crisis has hit investment and total factor productivity, especially in energy-intensive sectors. In the car industry the increase in energy costs has become the most important factor holding back production. Demand-side factors continue to be supportive. 5/19
ECB staff analysis shows that a persistent increase in energy prices significantly and persistently lowers potential output across euro area countries. 6/19
In the current environment, monetary and fiscal policies should pull together. Fiscal policy needs to protect the most vulnerable households and firms in a targeted way. Low-income households face much higher effective inflation rates due to a different consumption basket. 7/19
Governments should also foster potential growth and energy independence through public investment and structural reforms, addressing the underlying sources of the supply-side shocks. This would also help to dampen inflationary pressure over the medium term. 8/19
Unfortunately, governments have often not followed these prescriptions. Few measures target low-income households. Only 1 % contribute directly to the green transition. Public investment will remain subdued, picking up only in 2024/25, mainly due to defence spending. 9/19
Sound fiscal policies are also a key factor for stabilising debt dynamics. Initially, higher inflation had a beneficial effect on debt-to-GDP ratios. However, an inflation increase due to a supply-side shock is unlikely to alleviate the debt burden over the medium term. 10/19
Rising interest rates due to tighter monetary policy or higher public debt lift up the interest rate-growth differential. Currently, the differential still stands near historic lows, but it is about to become less favourable. 11/19
If governments do not credibly commit to sound fiscal policy, people may expect that higher inflation needs to ensure debt sustainability. With a credible central bank, monetary dominance prevails and monetary policy will tighten more if fiscal policy is too accommodative. 12/19
Fiscal policy is at risk of contributing to inflation at a time when price pressures remain unabated. Euro area inflation has continued to surprise on the upside. While fears of a technical recession have increased, economic data have recently also surprised positively. 13/19
Monetary policy must restore price stability as quickly as possible. ECB policy has already led to a tightening of financing conditions, but real rates mostly remain negative. Markets’ expectations of a “pivot” have worked against efforts to withdraw accommodation. 14/19
The longer inflation remains high, the larger the risk that inflation expectations de-anchor, putting medium-term price stability at risk. Higher perceived inflation appears to have a substantial impact on households’ inflation expectations, and this impact has been rising. 15/19
The largest risk for central banks remains a policy that is falsely calibrated on the assumption that inflation declines quickly, underestimating inflation persistence. #JacksonHole Therefore, we need to raise interest rates further, probably into restrictive territory. 16/19
Incoming data so far suggest that the room for slowing down the pace of interest rate hikes remains limited. High uncertainty around neutral rate estimates implies that they cannot serve as yardstick for our interest rate adjustments. Policy needs to remain data dependent. 17/19
Interest rates are the main instrument for calibrating our monetary policy stance, but we will also normalise our balance sheet in a measured and predictable way. We continue to stand ready to counter fragmentation in financial markets not justified by economic fundamentals.18/19
Summing up, governments need to internalise the effects of their actions on future inflation and monetary policy. Monetary policy needs to ensure a timely return of inflation to target, preserving people’s purchasing power and supporting investment by reducing uncertainty. 19/19
P.S.: Thanks to all my colleagues @ecb who commented on the speech.

The slides are found here: ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date…

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More from @Isabel_Schnabel

Oct 1
In my speech @ForoLaToja in beautiful Galicia I talked about “Monetary policy in a cost-of-living crisis” and had an interesting panel discussion about inflation with my former colleague Carlos Costa and with Antón Costas @CESEspana, moderated by Alejandra Kindelán @Aebanca. 1/15
High inflation means that many people are suffering a concerning loss in their purchasing power as their real, that is inflation-adjusted, wages are declining. My speech discusses what this decline in real wages means for monetary policy. 2/15
Real consumer wages in the euro area have declined by nearly 5% since 2021 Q3. Low-income households are most affected. The difference between the inflation rate of the lowest- and highest-income households has risen markedly. 3/15
Read 15 tweets
May 13
In my speech on “The globalisation of inflation”, I argue that global factors matter for domestic underlying inflation and that monetary policy needs to take these factors into account. This thread summarises the main messages. 🧵1/13
In the euro area, the exceptional surge in energy prices is the main contributor to headline inflation. But core inflation, too, is at a record high, accelerating at a pace more than twice as much as the pre-pandemic historical average. 2/13
A significant fraction of the current gap in year-on-year core inflation between the euro area and the United States reflects a few months of extreme outliers, mainly in the spring of 2021. Monthly changes have returned to pre-crisis patterns since then. 3/13
Read 13 tweets
Apr 2
In my speech @Ambrosetti_ on “Managing policy trade-offs”, I discuss the response of monetary policy to the contractionary supply shock caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and what role fiscal policy can play in macroeconomic stabilisation. #Finance2022 1/16
Thanks to the response of fiscal and monetary policy during the pandemic, the euro area was on track for one of the fastest recoveries in history before the invasion: from trough to peak, euro area real GDP expanded by 17.5% until year-end 2021. 2/16
In terms of the level of GDP, the euro area is still lagging behind the US due to the much stronger hit to activity in the pandemic. The war will measurably slow the pace of the recovery and lift inflation further away from our target, and for a longer period. 3/16
Read 17 tweets
Jan 2
Speeches are an important element of central bank communication. After two years at the @ecb’s Executive Board, I would like to present a selection of the most relevant of my (more than 30) speeches in a long thread🧵. 1/18
There are several categories of speeches: (1) on #MonetaryPolicy, explaining current policy considerations, (2) on #Narratives about monetary policy, and on the relationship of monetary policy & (3) #FiscalPolicy, (4) #FinancialStability, (5) #Inequality, (6) #ClimateChange. 2/18
#MonetaryPolicy: There are too many speeches to list them all, so let me select a few: on the ECB’s response to the pandemic (6 Apr 2020), mentioning (AFAIK) the concept of the euro area GDP-weighted yield curve for the first time: 3/18 ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date…
Read 18 tweets
May 20, 2021
Today we @ecb issued our new digital publication and interactive tool on inflation. It is one of our attempts to better explain the concept & measurement of inflation, its heterogeneity across goods and countries as well as the difference between perceived & actual inflation. 1/8
Chapter 1 explains the concept of inflation and why it matters. You can look at the inflation rate in a particular country for a particular category of goods and services, which gives an impression of the heterogeneity across countries and goods. 2/8
It also show the evolution over time for different countries, distinguishing the overall price index and certain subcategories, which show very different degrees of volatility: food, energy, non-energy industrial goods and services. 3/8
Read 9 tweets
Apr 9, 2021
In an interview with @derspiegel, conducted by @Bartz70Tim & @KaiserSte, I talk about recent inflation developments, monetary and fiscal policy in the pandemic, the @ecb’s role in combating climate change and financial stability. Below you find some key messages. 1/14
As we are still far from reaching our inflation aim of below, but close to, 2%, a sustainable rise of inflation in the direction of 2% would be good news. That would mean that the economy is gaining momentum and aggregate demand is increasing. 2/14
However, inflation is currently rising on the back of many one-off effects, like base effects in oil prices and the VAT rise in Germany. Our projections show that the rate of inflation will ease again in 2022, because aggregate demand will presumably remain weak. 3/14
Read 14 tweets

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