Zoekopties
Home Media Explainers Onderzoek & publicaties Statistieken Monetair beleid De euro Betalingsverkeer & markten Werken bij de ECB
Suggesties
Sorteren op
Niet beschikbaar in het Nederlands

José Gumiel

7 August 2018
ECONOMIC BULLETIN - BOX
Economic Bulletin Issue 5, 2018
Details
Abstract
In current forecasts and projections, a pick-up in labour costs is considered an important precondition for a sustained increase in underlying inflation. However, the signals provided by different labour cost indicators have been mixed for some time. While wage growth as measured by compensation per employee or by compensation per hour worked has clearly strengthened over the past two years, unit labour cost growth, i.e. wage growth adjusted for productivity growth, has remained rather flat over the same period. This begs the question: which labour cost indicators provide the relevant signal for the pass-through to, and the outlook for, underlying inflation? This box tries to shed some light on this issue by analysing the transmission of two different types of macroeconomic impulse, namely certain kinds of supply and demand shock, in the context of the New Area-Wide Model, and by comparing the results with the patterns of development observed in the recent past.
JEL Code
E31 : Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics→Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles→Price Level, Inflation, Deflation
J30 : Labor and Demographic Economics→Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs→General

Onze website maakt gebruik van cookies

We gebruiken functionele cookies om voorkeuren van gebruikers op te slaan, analytische cookies om de werking van de website te verbeteren en cookies van derden die zijn ingesteld door in de website geïntegreerde externe diensten.

U kunt deze cookies accepteren of weigeren. Voor meer informatie of voor het herzien van uw voorkeuren over cookies en serverlogs die we gebruiken, kunt u hier terecht:

Onze privacyverklaring lezen

Nadere informatie over ons gebruik van cookies