The figures illustrate that the inflation problem in the eurozone is more adverse than in the US. The peak rate of inflation was higher in the eurozone (10.6%) than in the US (8.9%). The peak in the eurozone is also more recent (October 2022) than in the US (June 2022). Furthermore, headline inflation in June was higher in the eurozone than in the US (5.5% vs 3.1%) as was core inflation (5.4% vs 4.9%).2 Finally, while core inflation rose in the eurozone in June from 5.3% to 5.4%, it fell sharply in the US from 5.3% to 4.8%.
Central banks attach greater focus to core inflation than headline inflation since they view the latter as being subject to temporary erratic swings arising from disturbances to energy and food prices. While headline inflation has fallen sharply in both economies in response to falling energy prices, core inflation has fallen much less, if at all. Excluding its recent decline in the US in June, core inflation has fluctuated between 5.3% and 5.7% in the US and eurozone since December 2022.
With little clear sign of core inflation declining, the Fed’s Federal Open Market Committee and the ECB’s Governing Council are both expected to raise interest rates this month.3 Market pricing suggests that the perceived probability of an interest rate increase is about 95% in both cases.
Market pricing for December suggests that little change in policy is expected during the autumn. While market participants view the ECB as being most likely to raise interest rates one more time later this year, the Fed is expected to stay put. Of course, in both cases market participants attach some probability to rates being above or below the most likely outcome.4