Are we now heading for stagflation?

For the 11th time in 14 months, inflation has beaten expectations. In May, the annual rate of consumer price inflation (CPI) fell to just 2.2% from April’s 2.3% as food and energy prices eased. Core inflation – stripping out food and energy – edged up to 1.6%. Meanwhile, retail price index (RPI) inflation, which includes mortgage costs, eased from –1.2% to –1.1% on rising mortgage rates.

What the commentators said

“Despite what may still turn out to be the worst recession since the war”, inflation remains “stubbornly above” the 2% target, said Jeremy Warner in The Independent. Chalk it up to tax rises on alcohol and tobacco and the slump in sterling over the past year, which is increasing the price of imported goods.

What’s more, inflation is expected to fall further as rising unemployment crimps demand, while “the full price effects of the sharp slowdown in the economy have yet to be felt”, said Capital Economics. Inflation looks set to drop to around 1%, “but hardly anyone expects” outright CPI deflation, noted Warner. Indeed, there may still be “quite a bit of inflationary pressure in the pipeline”.

Gains in import prices will continue to feed through, agreed Michael Saunders of Citigroup, while VAT is set to rise again in December. The oil price, meanwhile, has more than doubled this year, heralding higher petrol prices. Saunders reckons CPI could be back to over 3% next year; Allan Monks of JPMorgan has pencilled in 3.1% in January.

What next?

Everyone was hoping for a strong recovery and low inflation, but “I don’t think that option is going to be available to us”, said Saunders. The danger now is that the Bank of England will be forced to raise interest rates and clamp down on quantitative easing – which stokes inflationary pressure as more money in the system drives up prices – before the recovery is firmly established.

As Vince Cable pointed out in The Independent, the economy is still very weak. Banks continue to restrict credit, consumers’ massive debt load militates against a “spending spree”, and there is also little sign that “business is contemplating investment beyond the rebuilding of stocks”. With the economy hardly likely to grow at a healthy pace anytime soon, withdrawing the monetary stimulus would cause a relapse. “There is a plausible scenario of prolonged stagflation in which recovery is aborted by anti-inflationary interest rate rises.” All in all, monetary policymaking, said Colin Ellis of Daiwa Securities, “is not going to be boring again for some time”.


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