November is likely to mark the start of a transition phase for the global economy. For almost two years, major central banks have thrown extraordinary waves of support into shoring up economic activity and financial markets against the COVID-19-induced crisis. Now, officials in many countries seem ready to begin the march back toward a more normal policy setting.
At the conclusion of its November 3 policy meeting, we expect the Federal Reserve to announce the start of tapering: reducing the pace of its quantitative-easing purchases and signaling a return to using interest rates as the primary monetary-policy tool. The Bank of England (BoE) meets the next day, and may raise interest rates—or at least signal that a rate hike is imminent. Many smaller central banks are embarking on the same transition.
Why Start Normalizing Monetary Policy Now?
Why the change? We see both good and bad reasons. The good reason is that the world economy has, by most measures, largely recovered from the trials of the pandemic. US and global gross domestic product (GDP) are well on their way back to, or even above, precrisis levels. With growth recovered and likely to remain strong in 2022, there’s not as much need to lean heavily on policy support.
The bad reason behind normalization: surging inflation that has accompanied the growth recovery. Policymakers still expect the pace of climbing prices to slow—and we agree—but it’s been more intense and longer-lasting than initially expected. Commodity prices are rising and supply lines remain snarled, so it will likely take several more months before we see inflation come down meaningfully. The longer it stays elevated, the better the chances that long-term inflation expectations will shift up. That’s something central banks don’t want to see—inflation expectations can become self-fulfilling.
Fed, BoE, Other Central Banks: The Kickoff Is Imminent
Faced with strong growth and rising prices, central bankers around the world have signaled that the start of policy normalization is imminent: Fed officials have been clear that tapering is just around the corner. BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said that the country’s central bank will “have to act” in order to counter price pressures. Central bankers in other countries have signaled a readiness to raise rates or reduce asset purchases.
Financial markets have certainly gotten the message, with expectations for rate hikes over the next couple of years soaring over the past month (Display). Two-year government bond yields in the US, UK and most smaller economies are the highest they’ve been since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Even in markets where policymakers have been more cautious—the euro area and Australia, for example—rates have moved higher. Japan, of course, is an exception: there is no likelihood of rate hikes over an intermediate time horizon there.