The Ukraine war will have significant economic policy consequences for the European Union and its members, arising from the adverse supply shock triggered by the rise in oil and gas prices, energy independence measures, the inflow of refugees and boosted defence spending.
https://www.bruegel.org/author/jean-pisani-ferry/
The European Union has responded to the
war at its Eastern border with exceptional unity, resolve and speed. But
the invasion of Ukraine is a watershed. Whatever the duration of the
war, its legacy will be long-lasting. It will shape Europe’s policy
choices for the years and decades to come.
This blog post aims at providing a first
assessment of the economic policy consequences of the invasion and the
decisions taken since 24 February, when Russian troops entered Ukraine.
The main immediate risks to the European economy arise from the supply
shock triggered by the increase in oil and gas prices, from Europe’s
dependence on Russian energy and from the impact of geopolitical threats
on household confidence and investors’ sentiment. Europe also has the
duty to welcome millions of war refugees and provide them with emergency
assistance. In 2022 already, the direct budgetary impact of the
corresponding decisions could amount to 1.1/4%
of GDP, if not more. Longer-term, the EU is confronted with the need to
boost defence spending in response to aggravated security threats and
to rethink its energy system.
The upshot is that policymakers in Europe
must pivot away from the expected post-COVID-19 normalisation and to
join forces to tackle new emergencies. Longer term, they face a
wholesale rethink of the EU policy system, which will affect budgetary
priorities, principles for macroeconomic policies and market regulation
and the division of tasks between the EU and its member states.
For the purposes of this blog post, many
other channels, from the confidence shock to ripple effects on
agricultural supplies and commodities markets, are left aside. I do not
address either the broader, and critical, question of the potential
fragmentation of the global economy that could result from the
realisation that the ‘weaponisation of interdependence’ is no longer a matter for mere speculation.
Orders of magnitude provided in this blog
post are extremely rough. They may prove wrong by a significant margin.
The aim here is only to contribute to a discussion that must develop and
will certainly result in much more accurate assessments.
1. Responding to a new supply shock
On the eve of the attack on Ukraine, the
EU was already coping with a sharp deterioration of its terms of trade
and with rising inflation, most of which was attributable to the price
of imported energy. Although recovery from the pandemic shock is still
incomplete and inflationary expectations are still somewhat below
target, the European Central Bank was facing a difficult balancing act
between looking through temporary price hikes and addressing the
inflationary threats. The confrontation with Russia implies a more
pronounced and longer-lasting shock, which will seriously aggravate the
prevailing policy dilemma.
The standard rulebook when facing a
commodity price shock is that the central bank should essentially tackle
the second-round effects and avoid a potential escalation of
inflationary expectations. It should not embark on a futile attempt to
control the immediate impact of price rises on aggregate inflation (on
which increases in the policy rate have very limited bearing, if any),
and it should accommodate permanent relative price changes.
In the very short term, the ECB is likely
to wait and see until it takes a decision. But it may soon be forced to
make a politically difficult choice between tolerating headline
inflation remaining above target for longer, and weakening the economy
in the midst of a geopolitical confrontation. Its action will be further
complicated by the risk that the spreads on government bond markets
might widen...
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