Eurozone consumer prices fall for first time since 2009, adding to deflation fears
...Officials still appear to be “in denial” about the gravity of the problem, Mr. Tilford said. “Unfortunately, the longer they postpone meaningful action, the larger the policy response will need to be.”
...“Normally, when inflation expectations are as catastrophically low as they are right now in the eurozone, macroeconomic policy would be set aggressively to counteract that,” Mr. Tilford of the Centre for European Reform said. “They need a two-pronged policy: full-blown quantitative easing by the central bank, and an expansionary fiscal policy by governments to boost demand.”
Mr. Tilford said that he expected the European Central Bank to move forward with quantitative easing, but that it would be hard to convince the market that the central bank “will do enough for long enough to restore inflation expectations.”
As for government pump-priming, which if it happened could come from tax cuts or deficit spending, Mr. Tilford said, “There is absolutely no indication at all that we’ll see a change in fiscal policy.”