40-year-high US inflation self-inflicted

2022-05-17 00:52:19 来源:网络

A man shops at a supermarket in Foster City in California, the United States, April 12, 2022. [Photo/Xinhua]

The US Federal Reserve recently raised its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point, shifting the target range to 0.75 percent to 1 percent, following a smaller increase in March. It was the Fed's biggest increase in 22 years.

Last fall, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said rising prices were "transitionary" and would not leave "a permanent mark in the form of higher inflation". So, when inflation began to climb up after mid-2021, the Fed ignored it until it soared.

In March, the inflation rate in the United States accelerated to 8.5 percent, the highest since December 1981. It was partly fueled by rising energy and food prices, and the consumer price index, which shot to 6.5 percent, the most in four decades.

Typically, the rapidly increasing energy and food prices are being attributed to the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Effectively, they should be associated with economic sanctions which have turned a regional conflict with a limited, short-term trajectory into a global crisis with a broad, protracted horizon. That's the net effect of the hybrid proxy war in Ukraine.

Excluding volatile energy and food categories, the soaring inflation has been associated with pandemic-induced global supply disruptions and the recent COVID-19 outbreaks in China. New cases peaked in China in late April and are now coming down.

But disruptions in the global supply chains may penalize global economic prospects as long as the failed efforts to contain the virus in the West continue to give rise to new waves of variants.

Commodity prices peaked in early March, remain close to the peak level and have soared 39 percent since the beginning of the year. Food prices climbed to an all-time high in March, up nearly 20 percent year-on-year, and remain high in what UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called the "hurricane of hunger and a meltdown of the global food system", while crude oil price reached a high of $125 per barrel in early March, increasing 43 percent since January.

In Europe, the most exposed region to Russian energy, natural gas price quintupled to a high of 230 euros ($239.04) per megawatt-hour and has dropped to 104 euros, as concerns over Russian supplies have dissipated somewhat, but only temporarily.

Russia is the world's 11th largest economy with GDP of $1.8 trillion. It is the world's largest gas exporter and the second-largest crude oil exporter, and given its key role in global energy supply, Goldman Sachs has warned that the global economy "could soon be faced with one of the largest energy supply shocks ever".

A benign scenario in the Ukraine crisis was possible, but it would have required rapid, proactive diplomacy. Unfortunately, that has not been the priority of the proxy war. As US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said in late April: "We want to see Russia weakened." It was a stunning admission.

The Biden administration is reviewing the excess tariffs imposed on Chinese products ahead of their expiration in July. In fact, some policymakers are calling for reductions in the tariffs in order to provide relief to American consumers struggling with rising prices. These calls are fueled by the fear of a potential Republican landslide win in the midterm elections.

The US' misguided trade wars against China and other large economies have caused irreparable harm to the world economy, by undermining global recovery since 2017. Currently, average tariffs on Chinese imports are levied around 19.3 percent and cover more than two-thirds of all goods the US buys from China.

Yet the US trade deficit has not shrunk, as the Donald Trump and Joe Biden administrations expected. In March, it widened sharply to a record high of $110 billion, due to a broad-based rise in prices, especially as energy imports increased by 10.3 percent to a record high of $352 billion.

The lessons are unambiguous. Unilateral tariffs can resolve neither multilateral challenges nor distortions in the US domestic economy. In effect, recent research suggests that a trade liberalization policy equivalent to a 2-percentage-point reduction in tariffs could reduce US inflation by 1.3 percentage points from the current rate.

However, the Biden administration's priorities have been geopolitical rather than economic. That's precisely why it has continued with Trump's tariffs since January 2021. But, ironically, hoping to kill two birds with one stone, the Biden administration now blames "Trump's tariffs" for the record high inflation. In a disingenuous face-saving measure, the incumbent administration hopes to reframe its economic failures to derail Republican advances in the impending midterm elections.

"Has US inflation peaked?" The New York Times asked several weeks ago. "Has US inflation finally started to slow?" seconded the Financial Times more recently. Recent headlines reflect optimistic but premature hopes that inflation peaked in March.

Yet the Ukraine crisis is far from over, thanks to Biden's proxy war. Moreover, the bottlenecks in the global supply chains are yet to be cleared and could again clog supplies with the emergence of new novel coronavirus variants.

These pressures are likely to weigh on commodity prices longer, particularly if the Biden administration opts for new, ill-advised trade wars and continued misguided sanctions.

Meanwhile, the Fed's aggressive and belated rate hikes are escalating economic challenges in the US and elsewhere. And these could worsen in July, when the Fed plans to start quantitative tightening by culling assets from its $9 trillion balance sheet.

The author is the founder of Difference Group and has served at India, China and America Institute (US), the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China), and the EU Centre (Singapore). The views don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

,40-year-high US inflat全球环境问题 ion self-inflicted

相关:

初步考虑天津本轮疫情与污染的进口冷链食物联系关系  新华社天津5月16日电(记者白佳丽、张建新)记者从16日第183场天津市新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情防控工作新闻发布会上获悉,初步考虑天津本轮疫情与污染的进口冷链食品关联。   天津市政府副秘书长、市卫生健康委主任顾清介绍,截至5月16日18时,天津本轮本土疫情累计发现新冠病毒感染者28例,其中,天津市北辰区18例,东丽区10例。此轮疫情发生后,天津市迅速集结市级流调溯源队伍派驻涉疫地区开展应急处置。截至5月16日18时,追..

天津新增4例阳性传染者涉及首要区域和场所发布  中新网天津5月16日电 (杨子炀 孙玲玲)记者从天津市疫情防控指挥部获悉,经多方流调,2022年5月15日新增的4例阳性感染者的活动轨迹基本确定,其中涉及到的主要区域和场所予以公布。   天津市疾控部门提醒,与发布病例轨迹有交集人员,请立即主动向社区、单位或辖区疾控部门报告,配合做好集中隔离、居家隔离、健康监测、核酸检测等各项防控措施。   5月10日8:00-8:15北辰区小淀镇刘安庄村天津市芝霖药店   5月10日..

16日12时至18时天津新增2例阳性传染者详情发布  中新网天津5月16日电 (杨子炀)记者刚刚从天津市防控指挥部获悉,5月16日12时至18时,天津市疾控部门报告2名本土新冠病毒核酸检测阳性感染者,已转运至市定点医院,其中新冠肺炎确诊病例1例(轻型),新冠病毒无症状感染者1例,均为管控人员筛查发现。   现将5月16日12时至18时,新增的阳性感染者详情公布如下:   阳性感染者1,女,46岁,居住于天津市北辰区小淀镇,系管控人员筛查发现,5月16日采集咽拭子,经检测中..

燕郊一小区传出重大爆炸声 官方传递网信三河发布通报:2022年5月16日17时6分,三河市燕郊行宫东街道二三小区15号楼一住户发生燃气爆燃事故,现场2人受伤,已送往医院救治,生命体征平稳。事故造成部分居民房屋门窗受损。调查及善后工作正在有序进行。事故调查及善后工作组2022年5月16日

3.5米超大鱿鱼被冲上海滩 吓跑旅客!两周前,在南非开普半岛的西海岸,一条鱿鱼引发了不小骚乱。和我们常吃的鱿鱼比,它的体积大了上百倍。巨大的白色身躯随着海浪被冲上岸,近10条触手纠缠在一起,上面的吸盘密密麻麻。因为太过庞大,加上身体扭曲成团,很多游客以为有怪物来到海滩,吓得四散逃开。当地渔民和胆子大的游人走上前观察,发现这竟是大王鱿鱼,北欧传说中“海怪”的原型,也是世界上最神秘莫测的深海生物之一。大王鱿鱼生活在太平洋和大西洋的深海,雌..

斯里兰卡总理:国内汽油仅够使用1天 政府已没钱进口中新网5月16日电 据英国天空新闻、法新社报道,当地时间16日,斯里兰卡新任总理维克勒马辛哈在上任后的首次讲话中表示,斯里兰卡的汽油已经消耗殆尽,并且没有足够的美元为进口货物付款。资料图:斯里兰卡新任总理维克勒马辛哈。据报道,维克勒马辛哈说,目前,斯里兰卡的汽油库存仅够使用1天,可能导致每天的停电时间长达15小时。他还称,斯里兰卡政府没有足够的美元支付3批进口石油,运送石油的船只还在港口外等待付款。此外..

瑞典芬兰插手北约 会否激发核战风险进级?芬兰总统尼尼斯托和总理马林正式宣布加入北约直新闻:芬兰总统与总理昨天(15日)发布联合声明,宣布决定申请加入北约,纸质申请周三(18日)向北约正式提交,瑞典女首相周一(16日)也宣布,经议会辩论,瑞典政府将申请加入北约。管先生,你对此如何看?特约评论员 管姚:这意味着,芬兰与瑞典这两个北欧国家,打破多年保持的军事中立国家中立,选择投身北约这一全球最大的多边军事同盟,对国家发展路向进行了重大修正。瑞典女..

Slow initial response leads US to somber milestoneA man wearing a protective face mask sleeps on a subway train in New York City, US, May 6, 2022. [Photo/Agencies]Country that rejected overseas aid in COVID fight hits million case markAs the United States marked the somber milestone of 1 million people in the country killed by COVID-19, it looked back at what had caused the deaths of mo..

Making the Statue of Liberty Cry

40-year-high US inflation self-inflictedA man shops at a supermarket in Foster City in California, the United States, April 12, 2022. [Photo/Xinhua]The US Federal Reserve recently raised its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point, shifting the target range to 0.75 percent to 1 percent, following a smaller increase in March. It was the Fed's biggest increase in 22 year..