European Central Bank Governing Council member Escriva told an audience in Barcelona that the baseline economic projection faces considerable uncertainty. During his remarks, he focused on energy-related price pressures, oil production disruption and the unclear transmission of inflation through the economy.
Escriva said energy cost increases are no longer confined to commodity markets but are moving into services and transport sectors. He noted this spread of energy costs as a key element contributing to the uncertainty surrounding the baseline outlook.
The ECB official also addressed the situation in oil markets, saying that the scope of destruction to oil production is not known and that the timeline for any recovery in production remains uncertain. Those unknowns, he said, add to the difficulty of forecasting future price dynamics.
On price trajectories more broadly, Escriva pointed to significant uncertainty about the expected path of prices. He flagged uncertainty both about oil prices themselves and about the mechanisms by which inflationary pressures will be transmitted across different parts of the economy.
Escriva further highlighted uncertainty over potential second-round effects on wages. He said that, to date, such second-round wage effects have not materialized, leaving open the question of whether wage growth might later amplify inflationary trends.
The Governor's comments underscore multiple areas of ambiguity built into the ECB's baseline scenario: the pass-through of energy costs into services and transportation, the extent and recovery timing of disrupted oil production, the future path of prices, and the possibility of wages reacting in a way that would create further inflationary momentum.
Context and implications
Escriva's observations focus on variables that are central to the bank's assessment of inflation and economic momentum. The transmission of higher energy costs into services and transport, the uncertain state of oil production, and the unresolved question of wage responses are all factors the ECB will be watching closely as it evaluates baseline and alternative scenarios.