“Does President Lagarde have an easier job…”

…than Chair Powell or Governor Bailey?

The key chart

Quarterly consumer credit flows expressed as a multiple of pre-pandemic average flows (Source: ECB; FRED; BoE)

The key message

Does President Lagarde have an easier job than Chair Powell or Governor Bailey? In one important respect, yes.

Demand for consumer credit remains very subdued in the euro area (EA) in absolute terms and in contrast to trends observed in the US and the UK.

The European Central Bank (ECB), Federal Reserve and Bank of England each face delicate balancing acts between reducing inflation (their core mandates) and weaker growth. On the one hand, higher interest rates are supposed to deter borrowing and hence reduce aggregate demand and inflation. On the other hand, increased borrowing is one way that households can offset the pressures of falling real incomes.

“Higher interest rates provide incentives to households to save more now and postpone consumption from the present to the future”

Philip Lane, October 2022

In terms of reducing inflation, the fact that demand for consumer credit remains very subdued in absolute terms and in contrast to trends observed in the US and the UK makes President Lagarde’s task easier (if not easy!).

The EA has experienced eight consecutive quarters of positive consumer credit flows since 2Q21 (see key chart). These flows have yet to recover to their pre-pandemic levels, however. In 1Q23, the quarterly flow totalled €4.1bn, down from €5.2bn and €4.9bn in 4Q22 and 3Q22 respectively. Perhaps more importantly, the 1Q23 flow was only 0.4x the pre-pandemic average quarterly flow of €10.2bn.

Investors positioned for growth in the EA might take some comfort from the recovery in consumer demand in March 2023. The monthly flow rose to €2.6bn from €1.6bn in February 2023, but was still only 0.76x the pre-pandemic average flow of €3.4bn.

That said, the relatively subdued nature of EA consumer credit demand suggests that the risks to the ECB’s balancing act lie more towards weaker growth/recession. A different balance of risks to those faced by Chair Powell and Governor Bailey.

Please note that the summary comments and charts above are abstracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately.