If there are any inflation deniers out there, it is well past time for them to 'man the lifeboats' and make an emergency evacuation from this point of view. Inflation is raging and is accelerating sharply. In Germany – once a paradise of solid price stability- inflation over 12 months is 11% rising, at a 10.6% pace over six months -barely indicating any abatement, and then jumping to a 16.2% annual rate over three months. These are not just accelerations of inflation from a depressed base. One year-ago the German HICP was up by 4.2% year-over-year. At the time, people were arguing that inflation rate was distorted. Ha! Little did they know…
Of course, Germany is not in control of its own inflation rate anymore the way it once was because it's part of the European Monetary Union and tied into this basket of countries that has different inflation tolerances and different economic and fiscal arrangements as well.
EMU is what it is... The European Monetary Union is a monstrosity formed based on an idea by Robert Mundell on something he called an 'optimum currency area (OCA).' And like many things in economics, this concept was used to justify the formation of a 'European Monetary System' even though the members of this system do not qualify as an ideal OCA based on the criteria that Professor Mundell had set forth for such a union to be successful. For one thing, in their zeal to have a common currency, Europe was never ready to pull its fiscal fortunes together. There is no overarching fiscal policy as each country runs its own fiscal house although there are rules that can be used to bring countries back to fiscal morality when they stray. The reality, however, has been that it is only in the wake of Europe having employed this rule to discipline fiscal laxity that countries were put under severe stress and pressure and the European Central Bank eventually was pressed into service to make policies that have been far more inflationary than anyone would like to sustain the union.
German inflation and recession The German domestic inflation rate is officially put at 10% and there's a new record pace of inflation since Germany has been reunified. But for those of you who remember history, we know that Germany has suffered far worse inflations than this as Germany's hatred of inflation stems back to its pre-War era of hyperinflation. The Bundesbank now looks for Germany to enter recession and it also recognizes that inflation is too high, and it urges - and expects - the ECB to be raising rates by another substantial amount at its next meeting. However, quite clearly the toothpaste is out of the tube. The Bundesbank argues that the economy will suffer a recession, but it will not be a severe recession. That's a curious argument. When we combine the notion of recession in the German economy with the ECB raising interest rates sharply, and with the energy shortages being experienced, it's hard to know why the Bundesbank would want to stick its neck out to say that the coming recession would be relatively mild. It seems that the risks are for relative severity.
Inflations in Germany is broad – not isolated or concentrated Inflation diffusion for in Germany in September shows inflation went up across about 59% of the categories; this is a sharp acceleration from August where it went up in only 31.8% of the categories; in July it went up in only 9.1% of the categories. During these three months, Brent oil prices measured in euros fell by 5.3% in September, by 6.8% in August, and by 7.3% in July. We know that oil prices don't get into the CPI index immediately, but this has been a period in which oil prices are falling. In fact, oil prices fall on balance over six months and over 12 months. Yet, the inflation statistics for Germany are ugly
The inflation diffusion across categories over three months, six months, and 12 months shows inflation extremely broad on the order of 70% to 80%. That means over those time horizons inflation (annualized) is rising in 70% to 80% of the major CPI categories. Specifically, I calculate diffusion as derived from the three-month percentage change compared to the six-month pace and then the six-month pace compared to the 12-month pace, and then 12-month pace compared to the pace over 12-months in the comparable month of one year-ago. On all those comparisons prices are broadly accelerating across CPI categories.
Core inflation accelerates Core inflation for the HICP rises from 6.3% over 12 months to a pace of 8.4% over six months to a pace of 12.6% over three months - those are all annualized rates and they're all extreme. The domestic CPI excluding energy accelerates from 6% over 12 months to 7.8% over six months to 11% over three months also showing sequential acceleration, the same message as from the HICP core.









