Weekend Herald

Prices climb fast in US as inflation persists at rapid rate — grim facts for Fed, Biden

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Prices in the United States continued to climb at a brutally rapid pace in September, with a key inflation index increasing at the fastest rate in 40 years, bad news for the Federal Reserve as it struggles to get the cost of living under control.

Overall inflation climbed 8.2 per cent over the year through September, according to the latest consumer price index report yesterday, a slight moderation from August but more than what economists had expected.

Underlying inflation trends are headed in the wrong direction. After stripping out fuel and food — which are volatile and removed to get a better sense of the trajectory — prices climbed 6.6 per cent in the year through September. That was the quickest rate since 1982.

Inflation has been rapid for a year and a half, and is proving stubborn even as the Fed mounts its most aggressive campaign in generation­s to slow the economy and bring price increases under control. Fast inflation has also triggered the highest Social Security cost-of-living adjustment in decades — an 8.7 per cent increase in benefits to the retired and disabled, a move announced yesterday.

Central bankers have quickly raised interest rates from near-zero to a range of 3 per cent to 3.25 per cent, and investors expect a fourth straight three-quarter-point rate increase at the Fed’s next meeting, which concludes November 2. After the release of yesterday’s inflation data, they began to bet on another large move at the central bank’s December meeting.

“The trend is very troubling,” said Blerina Uruci, a US economist at T. Rowe Price.

Markets swung wildly after the report, with stocks falling sharply initially but then surging higher as investors struggled to digest what the data meant for the future. The S&P 500 closed up 2.6 per cent.

Higher Fed rates are already slowing the housing market, and are expected to slowly filter through the rest of the economy as they make it more expensive to borrow money for big purchases or business expansions. But consumer demand is taking time to crack: With jobs plentiful and wages rising, Americans are still spending.

That is allowing companies to continue charging more. Lingering supply chain issues tied to pandemicer­a shutdowns are keeping some goods in short supply, labour shortages are pushing up wages and many corporatio­ns are raising prices by more than is necessary to cover costs, finding they can swell profit margins without losing shoppers.

Inflation is also a stumbling block for President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats before the midterm elections. The report yesterday was the final consumer price index release before the November 8 elections, and Republican­s excoriated Biden for his handling of the economy. While Americans are keeping up their consumptio­n, many of the most vulnerable are struggling with rising food, fuel and housing costs — and most people see their pay eroded by the cost increases.

Biden said that the report showed “some progress” in combating the increases, noting that costs had climbed by less over the past three months than they had in the prior three months. But he also acknowledg­ed that inflation remained painfully high.

“We have more work to do,” he said.

Economists have predicted that the economy will slow and inflation will moderate in the months ahead. But they have been expecting an imminent cool-down for the past 18 months, and the data has repeatedly proved them wrong.

Worried that rapid inflation might last, Fed officials plan to raise interest rates to a point where they are constraini­ng the economy and hold them at a high level until price increases are clearly moderating. Officials have estimated that they will lift borrowing costs to about 4.6 per cent by the end of 2023.

Fed policy takes time to work, and most economists would not expect this year’s adjustment­s to be pulling inflation drasticall­y lower yet. But because rate moves work by slowing consumer demand, one might expect their effects to show up in everyday consumer goods and services categories first. That has yet to happen. From restaurant meals to cigarettes to stationery products, prices continue to climb briskly, suggesting consumers are still willing to pay up.

And the duration of the price burst is troubling. Overall inflation has been above 5 per cent for a full year now, far above the central bank’s goal. The Fed aims for 2 per cent annual inflation on average, which it defines using a different but related gauge: the personal consumptio­n expenditur­es measure, which will not be released until late this month.

As rapid price increases linger, central bankers fret that consumers and businesses will grow accustomed to them. If that happens, workers might begin to demand bigger pay increases to cover their climbing costs, and employers might make large and regular price adjustment­s a routine part of how they operate — making fast inflation a more permanent feature of the American economy and even tougher to stamp out.

Forces that economists had expected to temper inflation — including recent healing in tangled supply chains — are taking time to show up in the data. Used car prices were expected to decline sharply in this report, for instance, but fell only about half as much as anticipate­d. New car prices and car parts continued to rise rapidly as disruption­s in those industries linger.

As a result, goods prices, which were expected to drag down inflation, instead neither added to nor subtracted from the data in September. Petrol prices did weigh on overall inflation, which bodes badly going forward, since fuel costs have bounced back over the past month. Petrol could switch from pulling inflation down to pushing it up by the next data release.

Those details illustrate what a sticky problem inflation has become for the Fed — and how painful it could be to resolve it.

The Fed’s policies work by making it more expensive to borrow money. As shoppers pull back and expansions become more costly to finance, businesses should hire less, the labor market should weaken and wage growth should slow. That would reinforce the slowdown in demand.

That cycle takes time to play out — but because the Fed does not have the luxury of waiting in an environmen­t of rapid and potentiall­y reaccelera­ting inflation, officials have been adjusting policy aggressive­ly without waiting to see the consequenc­es.

As it does so, the risk that the central bank will induce a punishing recession that tosses many people out of work has climbed. That would particular­ly hurt lower-income workers, vulnerable to job loss, and already feeling the brunt of inflation.

“They have no choice but to try to get their arms around inflation,” said Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz.

He said that the Fed was late in diagnosing inflation and too slow in reacting to it and that the economy would now pay for the central bank’s delay in responding.

“This is a self-inflicted wound that will impact the most vulnerable members of our society the most,” El-Erian said.

 ?? ?? Higher Fed rates are already slowing the US housing market.
Higher Fed rates are already slowing the US housing market.

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