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Marco Annunziata's avatar

Very interesting analysis Spyros. It confirms my concern that wage pressures will make the ECB's job harder for longer. It also highlights the need for the Eurozone to reform both its labor market and its immigration framework. Start with the fact that the Eurozone suffers labor scarcity at 6 1/2% unemployment rate, compared to the US's 4%.

Much more interesting and paradoxical: the labor scarcity index in your charts shows a first sharp upward move starting around 2015 - or so, just when Europe started experiencing a strong rise in immigration. This is startling, given that we always hear that Europe needs more immigration to boost the labor force in the face of an aging population.

My impression looking at your chart is: immigration helps boost demand (the lack of demand index keeps dropping), but cannot alleviate labor scarcity because institutional constraints make it hard for immigrants to join the labor force. As a consequence, labor scarcity gets paradoxically worse.

Unless Europe makes it easier for immigrants to integrate in the labor market, immigration will remain a political and social headache with little economic benefit. Would be curious to hear your thoughts here.

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Gianluca Benigno's avatar

Very interesting analysis and agree that labor scarcity is creating pressure on wages. but are wages the drivers of inflation? You refer to the ECB bulletin and I would need to read to have a better assessment but I would also consider the possibility that wages are just catching up with inflation.

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