3 minute read

Inflation

Next Article
On the Job

On the Job

EMEL AKAN is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times in Washington, D.C. Previously she worked in the financial sector as an investment banker at JPMorgan. Emel Akan

Is Inflation Peaking?

Supply chain problems are expected to persist, analysts warn

Consumer prices jumped 7 percent in 2021, the largest annual increase in nearly four decades. After months of increasing prices, the most pressing question now is: Has inflation in the United States peaked?

In the latest economic projections by the Federal Reserve, headline inflation is expected to retreat to 2.6 percent in 2022 and then 2.3 percent in 2023.

Wall Street analysts project four rate increases this year from the U.S. central bank. As interest rates rise, so does the cost of borrowing, which will take some of the steam out of the economy.

But can the Fed contain stubbornly high inflation while some headwinds persist for supply chains?

The pandemic has paralyzed the production and flow of goods around the world, causing prices to rocket. Yet bottlenecks are expected to continue as the Omicron variant and China’s “zero-COVID” strategy deal further blows to global supply chains.

“The impact of the Omicron variant may continue to unfold,” John Porcari, the Biden administration’s port envoy, said at a White House press briefing on Jan. 5.

Porcari was tasked with addressing port congestion in August 2021. He said ports have seen significant progress and have been operating at record levels.

However, he noted, “it’s hard to tell” whether supply chain pressures have peaked.

More Chinese cities are coming under lockdown as part of Beijing’s zero-COVID policy to contain the virus. These restrictions affect operations in key manufacturing plants and ports, and therefore pose significant risks to global supply chains, analysts say.

The strict measures have recently rattled China’s industrial city of Ningbo, which is home to the third-largest container port in the world. Lockdowns in the city have put many local truck drivers and port workers under quarantine after more than two dozen COVID-19 cases were detected.

Since late December 2021, Chinese officials have disrupted business operations in several cities over cases of COVID-19, including Tianjin, a major port city near Beijing, and Shenzhen, the southern tech hub just across the border from Hong Kong.

Toyota, Volkswagen, and chipmaker Samsung are among the companies that have suffered production delays, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Disruptions and backlogs in global supply chains have overwhelmed the United States’ two largest ports, Los Angeles and Long Beach in California, since last summer.

Southern California is “the epicenter for imports from Asia,” and therefore, any backlogs in these ports have a “domino effect” on major U.S. ports, Mario Cordero, executive director at the Port of Long Beach, told Insight.

In addition, a truck driver shortage in the United States continues to exacerbate these problems and increase shipping costs. The American Trucking Associations forecasts that the United States is short 80,000 truckers—an all-time high for the sector.

Supply disruptions will persist until the end of 2022 for more than 50 percent of all sectors, according to S&P Global Ratings’ analysts. They found that in 54 out of 78 global sectors, most companies are “finding it very easy or somewhat easy to pass on costs” to consumers.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently created a new metric, the Global Supply Chain Pressure Index (GSCPI), to measure supply chain pressures. The new gauge aims to “provide a more comprehensive summary of potential disruptions affecting global supply chains,” New York Fed researchers wrote in a paper.

“More recently, the GSCPI seems to suggest that global supply chain pressures, while still historically high, have peaked and might start to moderate somewhat going forward.”

Some economists, however, challenge the views that pressures may have peaked. They warn the potential consequences could be more severe than last year if China escalates its containment policy.

The Consumer Price Index rose 7 percent in the 12 months through December 2021, the fastest pace since June 1982 and much higher than the Fed’s 2 percent target rate. The core inflation rate, which strips the volatile food and energy sectors, advanced 5.5 percent year-over-year—the highest rate since June 1991.

The Omicron variant and China’s ‘zero-COVID’ strategy are dealing further blows to global supply chains.

This article is from: