Despite relatively low inflation, French political instability is causing widespread economic uncertainty. This leads businesses to delay hiring and investment, and prompts ordinary citizens to increase their savings rates as a hedge against an unpredictable future.
Despite the ECB's powerful TPI backstop, it's unlikely to be used for France. Market turmoil there is driven by fundamental concerns over France's own lack of fiscal consolidation, not an external shock. This highlights a crucial limit of central bank intervention: safety nets are not designed to solve domestic political and fiscal failures.
The economy presents a confusing picture with acceptable GDP growth but virtually no job creation. This disconnect creates anxiety because for most people, job security, not GDP, is the primary measure of economic health. This leads to a feeling of being 'schizophrenic' about the economy's true state.
Rajan suggests that a central bank's reluctance to aggressively fight inflation may stem from a fear of being blamed for a potential recession. In a politically charged environment, the institutional risk of becoming the 'fall guy' can subtly influence policy, leading to a more dovish stance than economic data alone would suggest.
The Fed kept interest rates higher for months due to economic uncertainty caused by Donald Trump's tariff policies. This directly increased borrowing costs for consumers on credit cards, car loans, and variable-rate mortgages, creating a tangible financial impact from political actions.
The current labor market is in a state of paralysis, described as a "deer in the headlights" moment. Businesses, facing extreme uncertainty from tariffs and policy shifts, have frozen both hiring and layoffs. This creates a stagnant, low-dynamism environment where both employers and employees are cautiously waiting.
Markets react sharply to clear, quantifiable events like tariff announcements but are poor early-warning signals for gradual, harder-to-price risks like the erosion of democratic norms. This creates a dangerous complacency among investors and policymakers.
Policies designed to suppress market volatility create a fragile stability. The underlying risk doesn't disappear; it transmutes into social and political polarization, driven by wealth inequality. This social unrest is a leading indicator of future market instability.
Despite significant political events like confidence votes, the French inflation-linked bond (linker) market shows minimal reaction. Analysis indicates these markets are primarily influenced by supply-demand fundamentals rather than idiosyncratic French political dynamics, a counter-intuitive finding for sovereign debt.
Economic uncertainty and anxiety are the root causes of political violence. When governments devalue currency through inflation and amass huge debts, they create the stressful conditions that history shows consistently lead to civil unrest.
Official inflation metrics may be low, but public perception remains negative because wages haven't kept pace with the *cumulative* price increases since the pandemic. Consumers feel a "permanent price increase" on essential goods like groceries, making them feel poorer even if the rate of new inflation has slowed.