The global economy is not yet a ‘Better Man’

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The Festive Season is usually the only time of year we economists get for a period of rest, calm and contemplation. So, blame my weird economist’s mind when I took time out to watch the impressive Robbie Williams movie ‘Better Man’ and started drawing parallels with the global economy. It may surprise you to learn that I’ve never bought a single boyband record, not even from Williams. But this CGI-enhanced movie, which drags you into the world of rock, pop and human tragedies, got me thinking.

You see, the global economy’s start to the new year has been as wild as Robbie’s first years as a pop star. And I have to admit that there are very few reasons for us to change the main calls we made in early December. It sometimes happens that macro views become milder or more optimistic after a longer break. Not this time.

Inflation data over the last few days confirms that inflation is far from dead and instead seems to have as many lives as cats. In both the US and the eurozone, it’s now going through the third small (and hopefully temporary) upward trend since headline inflation normalised from record highs. This inflation stickiness is a result of less favourable energy base effects but also from still too high services inflation. It complicates central banks’ efforts to normalise policy rates towards neutral levels. And it also complicates any central banks’ efforts to support growth. This could become a concern, particularly in Europe.