<p>Two years after inflation began its rapid ascent, investors, economists and policymakers remain divided on the path ahead.</p>.<p>Yes, headline inflation across major developed economies has retreated from multidecade highs, inflationary impulses from Covid-19 such as rocketing used car and semiconductor prices are fading, and Europe's gas crisis has eased.</p>.<p>But jobs markets are tight and price pressures excluding volatile energy and food remain elevated.</p>.<p>The stakes are high for policymakers and traders, who have been repeatedly wrongfooted by inflation.</p>.<p>Here's the case for and against inflation falling quickly towards the 2 per cent level most central banks target.</p>.<p><strong>Case for a swift retreat</strong></p>.<p><strong>Energy prices</strong></p>.<p>Tumbling energy prices are pulling down headline inflation.</p>.<p>With European natural gas prices at their lowest since August 2021, down 85 per cent from last year's peak, euro area inflation is no longer in double digits.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a data-ved="2ahUKEwiErdTp-879AhWpSWwGHeKKD0oQFnoECBEQAQ" href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/what-will-it-cost-central-banks-to-beat-inflation-1197624.html">What will it cost central banks to beat inflation?</a></strong></p>.<p>US inflation rose 6.4 per cent in January, the smallest rise since October 2021, from a 9.1 per cent high last June.</p>.<p>China's reopening has boosted oil prices. But at $83 a barrel, Brent crude is still down 40 per cent from $139 hit just after Ukraine was invaded. It should average $89.23 this year, a Reuters poll shows.</p>.<p><strong>Supply chains settle</strong></p>.<p>Supply chain disruptions caused by Covid-19 and the war in Ukraine, key drivers of surging inflation, have eased sharply.</p>.<p>A New York Federal Reserve index suggests global supply chains have "returned to normal" as pressures are their lowest since before the pandemic, with China's reopening from tight Covid-19 restrictions the latest source of improvement.</p>.<p>Oxford Economics' lead economist Adam Slater notes that this Fed gauge leads inflation in the Group of Seven economies by around 12 months.</p>.<p>That implies G7 core inflation, excluding food and energy, could drop to around 2.5 per cent by the end of the year and below 2 per cent in early 2024, he estimates.</p>.<p><strong>What wage price spiral?</strong></p>.<p>Yes, labour markets are tight. But the employment cost index the Fed watches is slowing and posted its smallest rise in a year in the fourth quarter.</p>.<p>"If it's a strong growing economy, where demand for workers vastly outstrips supply, you would expect to see those wages and employment costs ticking higher," said ING chief international economist James Knightley.</p>.<p>Japan's real wages fell the most in nearly nine years in January, while Italian wages rose just 1.1 per cent in 2022 versus average inflation of 8.7 per cent.</p>.<p>Even central bank hawks like Germany's Joachim Nagel accept that no wage-price spiral is developing.</p>.<p>Instead, corporate profits have accounted for the lion's share of domestic eurozone price pressures since 2021, ECB data shows. A recent IMF study going back to the 1960s found that only in a small minority of cases where wages and inflation rose together for several quarters did sustained inflation result.</p>.<p><strong>Case for sticky inflation</strong></p>.<p><strong>History lesson</strong></p>.<p>Since 1970, once price rises averaged 8 per cent across 14 developed markets, it took at least six years for inflation to come back down to 3 per cent, according to a Research Affiliates analysis.</p>.<p>London Business School data shows that inflation across 21 countries since 1900 spiked during wars and energy crises and was then followed by a series of smaller peaks instead of a clear downward trajectory.</p>.<p>"I would bet the house against inflation averaging, say, 2.5 per cent for the next 10 years. It will be much higher," said Frédéric Leroux, head of cross-asset at Carmignac.</p>.<p>A Reuters poll forecast US headline inflation at 2.7 per cent by the end of 2023, with estimates as high as 4.6 per cent. Euro area inflation is seen anywhere between 2 per cent and 5.2 per cent by the end of the year.</p>.<p><strong>Pay day</strong></p>.<p>A tight US labour market suggests inflation stays sticky. Remember, the creation of 500,000 new jobs in January prompted a renewed ratcheting up of interest rate-hike bets.</p>.<p>Wage rises may not be driving inflation now, but the risk is that they will. Euro zone wage growth expectations among consumers are still rising, ECB data shows.</p>.<p>ECB policymakers have said that if high inflation persists, demands for pay matching inflation become more likely. Fed officials in February saw wage growth keeping services prices elevated.</p>.<p>Even in Japan, renowned for decades of deflation and stagnant pay, Uniqlo parent Fast Retailing has said it will raise wages by as much as 40 per cent.</p>.<p><strong>China factor</strong></p>.<p>China's economic reopening will add to global price pressures as trade and travel boosts demand from the world's largest commodities buyer.</p>.<p>The impact of this on energy prices is yet to be fully felt, said Idanna Appio, portfolio manager at First Eagle Investments and would build as Chinese travel returns.</p>.<p>Analysts polled by Reuters expect China to import a record amount of crude oil in 2023.</p>.<p>Chinese factories are now powering ahead. February manufacturing activity rose at the fastest pace in over a decade.</p>.<p>The chief executive of Gunvor, a top oil trader, sees oil prices rising in the second half of 2023 on renewed Chinese demand. Goldman Sachs expects China's re-opening could eventually raise US headline inflation by 0.5 percentage points.</p>
<p>Two years after inflation began its rapid ascent, investors, economists and policymakers remain divided on the path ahead.</p>.<p>Yes, headline inflation across major developed economies has retreated from multidecade highs, inflationary impulses from Covid-19 such as rocketing used car and semiconductor prices are fading, and Europe's gas crisis has eased.</p>.<p>But jobs markets are tight and price pressures excluding volatile energy and food remain elevated.</p>.<p>The stakes are high for policymakers and traders, who have been repeatedly wrongfooted by inflation.</p>.<p>Here's the case for and against inflation falling quickly towards the 2 per cent level most central banks target.</p>.<p><strong>Case for a swift retreat</strong></p>.<p><strong>Energy prices</strong></p>.<p>Tumbling energy prices are pulling down headline inflation.</p>.<p>With European natural gas prices at their lowest since August 2021, down 85 per cent from last year's peak, euro area inflation is no longer in double digits.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a data-ved="2ahUKEwiErdTp-879AhWpSWwGHeKKD0oQFnoECBEQAQ" href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/what-will-it-cost-central-banks-to-beat-inflation-1197624.html">What will it cost central banks to beat inflation?</a></strong></p>.<p>US inflation rose 6.4 per cent in January, the smallest rise since October 2021, from a 9.1 per cent high last June.</p>.<p>China's reopening has boosted oil prices. But at $83 a barrel, Brent crude is still down 40 per cent from $139 hit just after Ukraine was invaded. It should average $89.23 this year, a Reuters poll shows.</p>.<p><strong>Supply chains settle</strong></p>.<p>Supply chain disruptions caused by Covid-19 and the war in Ukraine, key drivers of surging inflation, have eased sharply.</p>.<p>A New York Federal Reserve index suggests global supply chains have "returned to normal" as pressures are their lowest since before the pandemic, with China's reopening from tight Covid-19 restrictions the latest source of improvement.</p>.<p>Oxford Economics' lead economist Adam Slater notes that this Fed gauge leads inflation in the Group of Seven economies by around 12 months.</p>.<p>That implies G7 core inflation, excluding food and energy, could drop to around 2.5 per cent by the end of the year and below 2 per cent in early 2024, he estimates.</p>.<p><strong>What wage price spiral?</strong></p>.<p>Yes, labour markets are tight. But the employment cost index the Fed watches is slowing and posted its smallest rise in a year in the fourth quarter.</p>.<p>"If it's a strong growing economy, where demand for workers vastly outstrips supply, you would expect to see those wages and employment costs ticking higher," said ING chief international economist James Knightley.</p>.<p>Japan's real wages fell the most in nearly nine years in January, while Italian wages rose just 1.1 per cent in 2022 versus average inflation of 8.7 per cent.</p>.<p>Even central bank hawks like Germany's Joachim Nagel accept that no wage-price spiral is developing.</p>.<p>Instead, corporate profits have accounted for the lion's share of domestic eurozone price pressures since 2021, ECB data shows. A recent IMF study going back to the 1960s found that only in a small minority of cases where wages and inflation rose together for several quarters did sustained inflation result.</p>.<p><strong>Case for sticky inflation</strong></p>.<p><strong>History lesson</strong></p>.<p>Since 1970, once price rises averaged 8 per cent across 14 developed markets, it took at least six years for inflation to come back down to 3 per cent, according to a Research Affiliates analysis.</p>.<p>London Business School data shows that inflation across 21 countries since 1900 spiked during wars and energy crises and was then followed by a series of smaller peaks instead of a clear downward trajectory.</p>.<p>"I would bet the house against inflation averaging, say, 2.5 per cent for the next 10 years. It will be much higher," said Frédéric Leroux, head of cross-asset at Carmignac.</p>.<p>A Reuters poll forecast US headline inflation at 2.7 per cent by the end of 2023, with estimates as high as 4.6 per cent. Euro area inflation is seen anywhere between 2 per cent and 5.2 per cent by the end of the year.</p>.<p><strong>Pay day</strong></p>.<p>A tight US labour market suggests inflation stays sticky. Remember, the creation of 500,000 new jobs in January prompted a renewed ratcheting up of interest rate-hike bets.</p>.<p>Wage rises may not be driving inflation now, but the risk is that they will. Euro zone wage growth expectations among consumers are still rising, ECB data shows.</p>.<p>ECB policymakers have said that if high inflation persists, demands for pay matching inflation become more likely. Fed officials in February saw wage growth keeping services prices elevated.</p>.<p>Even in Japan, renowned for decades of deflation and stagnant pay, Uniqlo parent Fast Retailing has said it will raise wages by as much as 40 per cent.</p>.<p><strong>China factor</strong></p>.<p>China's economic reopening will add to global price pressures as trade and travel boosts demand from the world's largest commodities buyer.</p>.<p>The impact of this on energy prices is yet to be fully felt, said Idanna Appio, portfolio manager at First Eagle Investments and would build as Chinese travel returns.</p>.<p>Analysts polled by Reuters expect China to import a record amount of crude oil in 2023.</p>.<p>Chinese factories are now powering ahead. February manufacturing activity rose at the fastest pace in over a decade.</p>.<p>The chief executive of Gunvor, a top oil trader, sees oil prices rising in the second half of 2023 on renewed Chinese demand. Goldman Sachs expects China's re-opening could eventually raise US headline inflation by 0.5 percentage points.</p>