San Diego Union-Tribune

FOOD, GAS PRICES PINCH FAMILIES AROUND GLOBE

Inflation, supply chain disruption­s push consumers and businesses to the brink

- BY JUSTIN SPIKE, PAUL WISEMAN & VANESSA GERA

From appliance stores in the United States to food markets in Hungary and gas stations in Poland, rising consumer prices fueled by high energy costs and supply chain disruption­s are putting a pinch on households and businesses worldwide.

Rising inflation is leading to price increases for food, gas and other products and pushing many people to choose between digging deeper into their pockets or tightening their belts. In developing economies, it’s especially dire.

“We’ve noticed that we’re consuming less,” Gabor Pardi, a shopper at an open-air food market in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, said after buying a sack of fresh vegetables recently. “We try to shop for the cheapest and most economical things, even if they don’t look as good.”

Nearly two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, the economic impact of the crisis is still being felt even after countries raced out of debilitati­ng lockdowns and consumer demand rebounded. Now, another surge of infections and a new coronaviru­s variant, Omicron, are leading countries to tighten their borders and impose other restrictio­ns, threatenin­g the global economic recovery.

Omicron has raised new fears that factories, ports and freight yards could be forced to close temporaril­y, putting more strain on global commerce and sending prices even higher.

“A new round of infections could further aggravate supply chains, putting even more upward pressure on inflation,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

The economic reverberat­ions are hitting central and eastern Europe especially hard, where countries have some of the highest inflation rates in the 27-nation European Union and people are struggling to

 ?? LASZLO BALOGH AP ?? Vendor Judit Sos sells eggs in a food market in Budapest, Hungary. Rising prices have been most pronounced in the developing economies of central and eastern Europe.
LASZLO BALOGH AP Vendor Judit Sos sells eggs in a food market in Budapest, Hungary. Rising prices have been most pronounced in the developing economies of central and eastern Europe.

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