The Swiss National Bank (SNB) is in no hurry to tighten monetary policy as the economy recovers. Rather, persistent low inflation risks de-anchoring inflation expectations.
Swiss GDP fell by 3% in 2020, according to the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs. Although sharp, the contraction was less severe than initially feared. Furthermore, GDP is expected to rebound by about 3% in 2021 and grow strongly also in 2022. If this materialises, GDP would return to its pre-pandemic level at the end of this year, although this remains subject to a high degree of uncertainty.
Consumer price inflation has been negative since late 2019 and was -0.5% year-on-year in February. Worryingly, this reflects both a slump in core inflation and in the prices of volatile components like food and energy. Unsurprisingly, households’ inflation expectations seem to have stabilised at a level consistent with inflation hovering at the low end of the 0-2% range the SNB uses to define price stability (see Chart 1). The risk that they fall further seems to be rising, a development to which the central bank should pay more attention than it appears to be doing.