Audio By Carbonatix
The Economist Intelligence Unit is warning that Inflation will settle higher globally owing to labour and trade changes.
According to its latest Global Outlook report, although the worst of the cost-of-living crisis is over, inflation is not forecast to return to the low trend of the pre-pandemic era.
“A tightening in labour markets, reflecting demographic changes and tighter immigration controls, will keep demand firm through higher wages.”, it said.
Meanwhile, it pointed out that the reshaping of supply chains, the wider application of tariffs and the likelihood of unpredictable climate conditions will apply upward pressure on prices. Inflation in developed markets is forecast to average 2.7% in 2024 and 2.3% over our five-year forecast period, up from 1.5% in the 2010s.
A major geopolitical confrontation would cause renewed price increases similar to what occurred in 2022, with a disproportionate impact on lower-income economies.
Fed, other central banks to cut interest rates
Meanwhile, the EIU has indicated that the US Federal Reserve will soon join other central banks in cutting interest rates.
According to the UK based firm, the strong economic performance of the US and relatively sticky inflation has delayed the first cut to interest rates by the Fed.
However, with US growth now slowing and labour market indicators deteriorating, it forecast that the Fed will reduce its policy rate in September 2024 and implement further two cuts before year-end (for a total of 75 basis points).
This will partially close a divergence that has emerged in global monetary policy, with the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England (the UK’s central bank) having started to reduce their policy rates in June 2024 and August 2024 respectively.
“Still, none of these central banks are expected to lower their policy rate below 2% over the next five years, with the Fed particularly constrained by trade and immigration policies that are likely to be inflationary under Mr Trump”, it pointed out.
In China, it said a loose policy stance will be maintained to fend off deflation risk, whereas the Bank of Japan (BOJ, the central bank) is forecast to gradually normalise policy after exiting its negative policy rate.
Latest Stories
-
Gov’t to establish Prison Industrial Hub to equip inmates with income-generating skills – Prison Service boss
8 minutes -
Alhassan Tampuli donates cement, roofing sheets to support storm victims in Gushegu
8 minutes -
Alhassan Tampuli appeals for urgent support for storm victims in Gushegu
11 minutes -
The hypocrisy must stop; pass Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill now – Alhassan Tampuli to Mahama
15 minutes -
Imprisonment should be rehabilitative, not punitive – Ghana Prisons boss at UNGA
37 minutes -
Ga Adangbe traditional priests petition Mahama over McDan aviation licence revocation
48 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ Bill: NDC’s arrogance is worrying – Hassan Tampuli
59 minutes -
Let’s give OSP time to mature, not to scrap it – Hassan Tampuli
1 hour -
Nigeria convicts 386 Islamist militants in mass trials
1 hour -
Djibouti president wins election with 97.8% of vote, state media saysÂ
1 hour -
We don’t have mandate to deduct tax from rent allowance of security services personnel – Interior Ministry clarifies
1 hour -
Ablakwa receives Presidential Special Envoy on Reparations to advance global agenda
2 hours -
Christina Koch becomes first woman to travel around the moon on Artemis II
2 hours -
Epstein survivors’ calls to meet King Charles and Queen harder to ignore as US visit approaches
2 hours -
UN Secretary-General names Ghana’s Anita Kiki Gbeho as South Sudan envoy
2 hours