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Analysis

Inflation tracker: Inflation has plateaued

Some common inflation trajectories emerge between the different economic blocs: disinflation of food and manufactured goods continues, while energy deflation has largely abated, except in the United Kingdom. Apart from Japan, price pressure indicators (supply side) have rebounded in recent months (page 19) while wage growth is currently higher than inflation in all the regions (page 27).
In the United States, CPI inflation fell slightly, from 3.5% in year-on-year terms in March to 3.4% in April, while the core rate fell from 3.8% to 3.6%. Deflation in used vehicles (from -2.2% in March to -6.9%) contributed mainly to this decline. On the other hand, services inflation remained stable at 5.3%. However, this figure masks contrasting dynamics, since the housing component has been decelerating, slowly but continuously for the past year (+5.5% y/y in April), while inflation in non-housing services (+4.9% y/y in April) has accelerated since September 2023.

In April, core inflation in the euro area fell again, from 2.9% to 2.7%. This reinforced expectations of a first ECB rate cut in June. The latter will also welcome the decline in alternative measures of inflation: two new measures (weighted median, 10% trimmed mean) fell back below 3% in March. Belgium, however, saw a fairly sharp rebound in inflation (4.9% in April compared with deflation of -1.7% in October 2023).

In the United Kingdom, headline inflation remained stable at 3.8% in March. Energy deflation eased but remained strong (from -13.8% to -12.7%) and core inflation slowed significantly (4.5% to 4.2%). However, the landing phase towards the 2% target will come up against sustained and slightly higher base wage growth in March at 6.2% (compared to 5.9% in February). Moreover, tensions in the housing market are increasing. The actual rent index reached a new high in March, with a year-on-year increase of more than 7%, for the first time in 30 years. The owner-equivalent rent index follows a similar path but shows a lower increase (6.3% y/y). This explains the large increase in the share of CPI components with a rise above 6% (inflation generalisation chart on page 13).

In Japan, core inflation (excluding energy and fresh food) fell below 3% in March for the first time since November 2022. At 2.0%, services inflation remained stable, but the 3m/3m annualised rate fell to 0%, the lowest in two years. That said, the breakeven inflation (page 25) started to rise again, after a downturn at the end of last year. Despite a significant rise in wages (page 27), domestic demand remains very fragile and contributes to limiting inflation dynamics. According to preliminary results, Japanese GDP fell by 0.5% q/q in Q1, driven down by household consumption (-0.7 q/q).

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