<http://news.independent.co.uk/business/comment/article333939.ece>

Stephen King: Rulebook torn up as link between energy price increases
and wage rises is broken

Labour market developments in the West are increasingly dependent on
events in East
Published: 19 December 2005

Most years throw up big economic surprises of one sort or another.
2005 proved no exception. At the beginning of the year, the main
worries were probably the US housing market and the growth of external
imbalances. Forecasters had to grapple with the possibility that the
US housing market could crash, leading to a collapse in consumer
spending, or that the dollar could plummet, driving up US bond yields.
Neither scenario panned out: the US housing market strengthened
through much of the year and the dollar staged a remarkable recovery,
particularly given the lack of progress on the US current account
deficit. US bond yields are ending the year only a touch higher than
they were at the beginning of 2005.

The main surprises came in other areas. Across much of Asia, economic
growth was notably stronger than expected. Japan's recovery gathered
momentum, with encouraging signs of an acceleration in domestic
demand. Both consumption and capital spending picked up, suggesting
that Japan's deflationary problems may finally be drawing to a close:
indeed, the Bank of Japan is already signalling that the monetary
printing presses may be turned off in 2006. Elsewhere in Asia, China's
growth rate remained remarkably robust throughout 2005, not far short
of 10 per cent for the year as a whole. The authorities may have
rebalanced the economy, with less dependence on an overheating
construction sector, but there are few signs of any meaningful
slowdown: better quality growth, perhaps, but certainly no growth
deceleration. Meanwhile, India is showing signs of emulating China:
growth in 2005 looks to be coming in at approaching 8 per cent, well
above consensus expectations at the beginning of the year.

These Asian surprises are important. They have helped shape economic
progress in the rest of the world throughout much of 2005. They have
also created puzzles for policymakers in the US and in Europe. Asia's
success has led to new challenges. The first of these, and most
obvious, is higher oil prices. Whereas the oil price shocks of the
1970s were all about supply-side shocks - consequences of political
events, notably the Yom Kippur war in 1973 and the Iranian Revolution
in 1979 - the latest oil price increases are much more the result of
stronger world demand. That extra demand is centred on developments in
Asia.

The second puzzle is the impact of Asian success - and, for that
matter, Central and Eastern European success - on wages and profits in
the industrialised West. China, India and other developing countries
are doing well in part because they are able to attract capital from
elsewhere in the world: their labour costs, if you like, are a magnet
for profit-maximising firms who are suddenly faced with greater choice
over the geographical location of their labour inputs.

Put these two puzzles together and you end up with a third puzzle. How
should central banks react when energy prices are rising but, for the
same reasons, Western labour costs are falling? This relationship,
after all, is something entirely new. In the 1970s, higher energy
prices were always associated with higher wages: now, they're
associated with lower wages.

The absence of wage pressures is a remarkable thing. We saw it last
week in the UK, where inflation unexpectedly fell and wage pressures
abated in surprising fashion. We're seeing it in Germany, where unions
no longer have realistic expectations of negotiating substantial wage
increases for their members: they recognise the mobility of capital
and understand that wage moderation is the only way in which German
jobs are going to be preserved. And we're seeing it in a rather
different guise in the United States, where pressure to utilise the
labour force more efficiently has been met not so much by wage cuts
but through a further surge in productivity. In all three countries,
growth in unit labour costs - wage costs adjusted for changes in
productivity - has been remarkably docile.

This lack of any significant wage response to higher energy prices has
left central bankers scratching their heads. The Bank of England was
thinking at the beginning of 2005 about raising interest rates,
fearing that increases in energy prices would unleash higher wage
demands. In the event, those wage demands never materialised, and the
Bank was eventually obliged to cut interest rates in August. The
Federal Reserve has, perhaps, had an easier time. The US economy has
been a lot more robust than the UK economy over the last 12 months
and, together with a persistent rise in the headline inflation rate
and a level of short-term interest rates at the beginning of the year
that was remarkably low by historic standards, the Fed found it easy
to justify a remorseless approach towards monetary tightening through
2005 as a whole.

The European Central Bank spent much of 2005 maintaining its
traditional stance of monetary hibernation: nothing happened.
Eventually, though, the rise in energy prices led the ECB to act,
raising its key repo rate by 0.25 percentage points towards the end of
the year. The ECB was quick to emphasise, though, that markets would
be wrong to think that the ECB was about to mimic the Federal
Reserve's behaviour: European rates might be rising but there is
apparently no desire to push rates up by 0.25 percentage points at
each and every policy meeting over coming months.

Perhaps the best way to think about these monetary adjustments is in
terms of insurance. Central bankers are fully aware that inflationary
behaviour appears to have morphed in recent years. Their econometric
models may be telling them that inflation is on the verge of
re-accelerating, but the reality is a lot more encouraging: in the
absence of a rise in labour costs, it's difficult to see why we're
about to embark on a new era of high inflation. So there are two
justifications for raising interest rates now. First, the danger
remains that wage costs will eventually re-accelerate, so better to
pre-empt that risk by firing a monetary shot across the
wage-negotiating bows. Second, there's always the possibility that
energy prices will keep on going up as China, India and other
developing countries continue to enjoy rapid rates of economic
expansion. Central bankers tend to focus on so-called "core" rates of
inflation, which exclude energy prices, but if energy prices are
persistently rising it makes increasing sense to focus on broader
measures of inflation that include energy.

The good news, though, is that bond markets hardly shifted during
2005, suggesting that financial markets remain relaxed about
inflation. Central banks have a lot of credibility, keeping
inflationary expectations under control. And the pressures of
globalisation appear to have broken the link between energy price
increases and wage rises. So, if there's a lesson from 2005, it's the
need to think global. Labour market developments in the West are
increasingly dependent on economic developments in the East. Central
bank responses in 2006 will depend not just on the results stemming
from traditional econometric models but also on the perceived effects
of globalisation on both energy prices and labour costs. As for
surprises, the really interesting revelations will come not so much
from specific events but, rather, from the changing economic
relationships that stem from the integration of China, India and other
developing countries into the global economy. The pages of the old
economic rulebook are becoming increasingly redundant.

Stephen King is managing director of economics at HSBC

stephen.king@ hsbcib.com

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