ECB Publishes Paper on Forward-looking Trackers of Negotiated Wages

  • The ECB published a paper on forward-looking trackers of negotiated wages for the euro area based on data from seven countries.
European Central Bank eurr

According to the paper the new trackers are based on collective wage agreement data from seven countries, including the 5 largest eurozone economies: Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Austria and Greece. Trackers for three more countries – Belgium, Finland and Portugal – are being developed.

“The paper demonstrates how agreement-level data can be used to study drivers of aggregate negotiated wage growth, as well as monitor the breadth of wage increases and account for time-varying factors such as one-off payments when assessing wage pressures,” the ECB said in the paper’s abstract.

In the euro area and the five largest economies, more than 75% of all employees are covered by collective agreements. In some countries like France, Italy and Belgium the figure is close to 100%. The ECB has had an indicator of negotiated wage growth for nine countries since 2001, but the data it’s based on is non-harmonised across those countries. The new forward-looking trackers aim to harmonise this data and improve the accuracy of the ECB’s negotiated wage growth indicator and can be used to cross-check wage growth forecasts and provide signals for current and future wage pressures.

Frederik Ducrozet, head of macroeconomic research at Pictet, commented on X that the ECB’s leading indicators including the “new tracker” point to “some cooling of wage pressure in recent months.”

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