ECB wage tracker shows muted pay pressure despite war inflation

FRANKFURT, June 17 (Reuters) – Euro zone negotiated wage growth appears to be slowing as predicted, European ​Central Bank data showed on Wednesday, offering policymakers ‌relief that the Iran-war-induced inflation surge has not set off a fresh round of pay demands.
The ECB fears workers will ​demand compensation for rapid inflation, much like in ​2022, triggering a self-reinforcing cycle that can only ⁠be tamed through higher borrowing costs.
However, the ECB’s own ​wage tracker, which includes data up to the end ​of May, was unrevised and indicates negotiated wage growth at around 2.6% by end-2026, below the 3.2% last year.
The data series with ​unsmoothed one-off payments shows wage growth for the ​whole of 2026 at 2.6%, down from 3% a year earlier, ‌said ⁠the ECB, which has long argued that wage growth between 2% and 3% is consistent with its 2% inflation target.
Though just one piece in the inflation puzzle, the ​data may ​take pressure off ⁠policymakers to quickly raise rates again.
The ECB lifted its benchmark rate to 2.25% last ​week after inflation exceeded 3%, mostly to prevent ​expectations ⁠from rising, and policymakers are now debating whether a follow-up move in July is needed.
Markets expect between one and ⁠two ​more rate hikes over the ​coming year and the next move is fully priced in by October.

Reporting ​by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Alex Richardson and Alexander Smith.

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