The Pak Banker

The return of stagflatio­n?

- Desmond Lachman

America is no stranger to stagflatio­n. In the second half of the 1970s and early 1980s, we suffered from the unwelcome combinatio­n of high inflation, sluggish economic growth and high unemployme­nt. We did so as the country suffered from two major oil supply shocks that sent internatio­nal oil prices soaring.

Today, there is a real risk that we will return to the stagflatio­n of the past but for a different reason than in the 1970s. This time around it might be the result of excessivel­y loose budget and monetary policies combined with continued supply disruption­s both at home and abroad.

Those supply disruption­s might intensify as a result of the spread of the Delta COVID-19 variant that is already wreaking havoc in several countries.

The stagflatio­n risk is underlined by recent economic data. Consumer price inflation has risen to 5 percent, its highest level since 2008, even as unemployme­nt remains stuck at around 6 percent, far from its full employment level.

The main risk that today's inflation will prove to be anything but transitory stems from the unusually easy stance of budget and monetary policy. It also stems from the likely release of the considerab­le amount of pent-up demand that was built up during the pandemic's lockdown phase.

One way to gauge this risk is to consider the size of the budget stimulus in relation to the gap between the current U.S. output level and its full employment level. Combining the December 2020 bipartisan stimulus package

with the March 2021 Biden American Rescue Plan, it turns out that this year the U.S. economy will receive a record peacetime budget stimulus amounting to a staggering 13 percent of GDP.

That stimulus is around four times the Congressio­nal Budget Office's estimate of the current output gap, which must raise the specter of economic overheatin­g by yearend.

Adding to the specter of overheatin­g is the continued extraordin­arily easy monetary policy stance. As a result of the

Federal Reserve's continuing to buy $120 billion a month in Treasury Bonds and mortgageba­cked securities, interest rates remain at ultra-low levels, housing and equity prices are soaring and the broad money supply continues to grow at by far its fastest rate in the past 40 years.

Adding fuel to the rapidly increasing aggregate demand is the fact that households are now beginning to draw down the $2.6 trillion in excess savings that they are estimated to have built up during the lockdown phase.

The key risk that higher inflation will continue to be accompanie­d by high unemployme­nt is that the Delta variant might spread rapidly both at home and abroad. Underlinin­g this risk are the facts that this variant is much more infectious than the earlier COVID strains and that the vaccines seem to be less effective in protecting the vaccinated public against this particular strain than against the original strain.

Should the Delta variant take hold abroad, it could prevent the repair to the current global supply chain disruption­s. In particular, it could keep both food and industrial materials in short supply, and it could exacerbate the current shortage in electronic chip production that is so vital to modern manufactur­ing production. Worse yet, should the Delta variant spread in the United States, it could keep schools closed and it could delay the full return of people to work.

The heightened risk to the supply-side of the economy adds urgency for policy changes to rein in the current degree of excess demand if we are to avoid a prolonged period of inflation.

It supports the idea that the Federal Reserve should immediatel­y dial back its ultra-easy monetary policy stance.

It also supports the idea that the U.S. economy can ill afford any further budget stimulus and that any plan to increase public infrastruc­ture spending must be fully financed by appropriat­e tax increases.

 ??  ?? ‘‘The heightened risk to the supply-side of the economy
‘‘The heightened risk to the supply-side of the economy

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