Everyone in Europe has long forgotten about what was going on there before COVID. First, an economy that had been stuck two years within a deflationary downturn central bankers like Italy’s new recycled top guy Mario Draghi clumsily mistook for an inflationary takeoff. Both the inflation puzzle and ultimately a pre-pandemic recession have taken a back seat to everything corona.

Whereas Draghi spent those years howling for inflationary conditions that were nowhere in sight – and plenty which unambiguously dictated its opposite – this supposedly virus-driven recession has provided official cover. As a result, official numbers and commentary surrounding them have become more honest.

With no one else to blame back then, inflation they said was guaranteed without the slightest trace. Nowadays, even when there might be the slightest trace, those at the ECB, anyway, are approaching this differently.

If Eurostat’s flash inflation report for January 2021 had time-traveled back to January 2018 when Draghi was reaching the heights of his unbacked confidence, who knows the greater hysteria which might’ve come from it. Europe’s statistical agency instead reported yesterday that inflation rates jumped last month, accelerating unusually.

The headline HICP increase was 0.9% year-over-year, not a whole lot but a serious improvement from five straight months of outright deflation which had December’s rate at -0.3%.

The core HICP figure for Europe surged to 1.4% from its record low of 0.2% each the prior three months. Not just well off its lowest ever December to January, the latter’s acceleration left the core number at its highest since 2015. Nobody loves the “highest since…” phrase more than central bankers talking inflation and relatedly interest rates.




Rather than embrace what seems like all its “money printing” coming to fruition finally, the ECB immediately poured reasonable and honest cold water all over it. This wasn’t the economy roaring back to life seasoned by an over-abundance of liquidity, instead the jump in consumer prices were products of one-off factors related largely to governments beginning January 1 reimposing full VAT tax rates previously suspended last year as “stimulus” measures.

Even Bloomberg wasn’t buying it, the headline all you’d need: Euro-Area Inflation Jumps as ECB Warns Against Undue Optimism.

“Temporary factors are pushing up inflation at the moment,” and “that’s exactly why the ECB shouldn’t be alarmed,” said Bert Colijn, senior euro-zone economist at ING. “With wage growth weakening and unemployment expected to increase in 2021, sustainable moves toward target remain a while away.”

In fact, the ECB (and Eurosystem staff) has been downgrading its inflation forecasts all along; which simply raises the uncomfortable question, what is it the ECB has actually been doing all this time? If these projections are what Economists working for the central bank and the central government actually believe of QE’s effectiveness, why are so many in the media and around the world so convinced of some huge inflationary blitz for these same QE’s?



As of December’s forecasts, Eurosystem staff downgraded 2020 estimates to just 0.2%, kept 2021 figured for only 1.0% (even knowing what these January numbers would look like) before dropping 2022 down to a paltry 1.1% from the 1.3% the models had been thinking for two years down the road when bank reserves reach, what, €4.5 trillion? Five? More?

Trillions in bank reserves, and the first “official” forecast for 2023 (not pictured above) is…1.4%. So much for excessive “money printing” – and this from the very people doing it!

In other words, despite all this hoopla, the same mainstream-driven fuss which its own officials relentlessly hyped several years ago during Inflation Hysteria #1, these central bank models don’t believe much in their own same measures. They’re not thinking of even reaching close to the inflation target, let alone exceeding it in some major way, for years out beyond the current forecast window.

Inflation Hysteria #2, then, oddly enough doesn’t even include the very people who are actually “printing” all the “money” and yet it persists unabated and largely unchallenged. Hysteria #1 at least had Draghi and the rest. Number two is, in every way, even more hysterical. 

When you really look at the details, it’s not really a stretch as to why the current environment comes up so much short of even Reflation #3. Perhaps those two things really are related and inversely proportional. The worse it is now, the more unsupported the claims it won’t be. As always, this isn’t really about just Europe.