Has inflation turned?

Producer prices fell in August. Both output and input price indexes measuring month on month changes went negative in the month just gone. It was the first time the month on month output index has been negative since October 2006.

So, at last, it seems inflation may be turning.

The annual rate of inflation is still too high of course, it will take some time before that goes negative. The year on year change in the input prices incurred by manufacturers fell to 26 per cent in August, from 29.3 per cent in July. As for output prices, the annual rate fell to 9.7 per cent from 10.2 per cent.

Manufacturers saw the price they pay suppliers fall in no less than six of the nine main categories in August. Crude oil was down 11 per cent in the month, but then fuel, home food materials, imported food materials, imported metals and other import materials all fell in cost. Even in the areas where input costs did rise, the jump was quite modest.

The falling price of oil was the main factor behind the improving output index. Over the last 12 months, the price manufacturers have been charging for petroleum products has increased by 28.9 per cent. Yet in August, these same products fell by 4.8 per cent. The item which saw the second highest rate of inflation within the output index, chemical products, however, still rose quite sharply – up by 0.9 per cent in the month.

It is just the first step. We will need to see a couple more data releases like this one from the ONS in October and November, before the change in inflationary pressures becomes obvious.

But it does seem we are seeing the positive consequences of the credit crunch. As has been argued here before, the shortage of credit will mean falling demand, which will lead to falling prices eventually. It has been said here that it is just a matter of time before this starts to happen, and this morning’s data shows that time is at last drawing nigh.

producer prices

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Is food inflation falling at last?

Could that nasty period of food inflation be nearing its end? The latest data from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) out yesterday suggests it may.

According to the BRC, food prices rose by 0.3 per cent on last month. Okay, that’s about 0.3 per cent too high, but then again, in July food prices shot up by 1.9 per cent on the month before.

Now one month’s worth of data does not make a trend, and indeed the monthly figures were even lower than that on one occasion this year – in March, when food inflation was zero. But it is an encouraging sign, nevertheless.

Non-food, inflation, however, picked up in the month – rising to 0.6 per cent in July, after July saw non-food prices drop by 0.8 per cent.

The annual figures are not so encouraging – in fact, food inflation hit 10 per cent year on year in August. The highest level recorded so far during this cycle.

With food prices rising by around three times the rate of wage increases – it is no wonder we are feeling the pinch. But it is the month on month figures that give us the real clue about the future. So it will be interesting to see how this index develops over the next few months.

And that brings us to a first prediction on when the UK economic recovery can begin – to find out more, read the next article.

food inflation

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Has inflation peaked?

Well, actually, inflation in the UK has not peaked yet. Utility bills are still rising, and it seems the consumer price index may well hit 5 per cent within a few months – expect some nasty headlines when that happens. But, looking beyond that, it seems there are reasons to believe the index will then fall sharply.

Consider the price of oil. You remember what it was like earlier this year and last. The price of oil soared on the thinnest of rumours. You would have thought that earlier this week, as Gustav wailed its way inexorably towards the US, the black stuff would have risen in price.

You would have thought that, as the world’s second largest exporter of oil – that would be Russia – plays soldiers, and gives its tanks a good airing, and Vlad recalls the good old days when he was in the KGB, the price of oil would rocket. But, it didn’t.

Then, as that mother of a storm that was Gustav turned into something of a less-fiery Aunt, oil fell. All of a sudden, they are talking about $100 a barrel again.

As ever, there are plenty of reasons to fear this could change. Iran is trying to persuade fellow OPEC members to cut oil supply. Yet normally, even the whiff of a rumour about Iran and Venezuela working together would have sent oil soaring again.

It has been argued here many times before, at current levels oil is not affordable. Should it stay at the current price for an extended timeframe, the global economy will hit recession – and that will hit OPEC. If markets are left to their own devices, and political interference is kept to a minimum, oil will fall rapidly next year.

It is also very much in OPEC’s interests to see oil fall in price – although, in the longer-term maybe not in our interests. The longer oil stays at current levels, the sooner the West will develop alternatives. Solar and wind power may represent the potential for cheap energy for ever, they may represent the solution to global warming, but they would be bad news for OPEC.

So there are two reasons to expect oil to fall in price. Firstly, the credit crunch is causing demand to fall. Secondly, OPEC would be shooting itself in the foot if it tried to stop the fall.

But it is not just oil which is falling; wholesale gas, wholesale electricity and agricultural commodity prices have all fallen recently. Recently, the CBI produced data to suggest the core output price inflation is set to fall.

It will take time. It is like moving a massive ship – there is an extended time lag between a change in the factors that determine course, and the actual change in course. Let’s just hope that the UK can see a change in direction before it hits an iceberg.

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Retail price index hits 5 per cent – where next?

And so inflation hits 4.4 per cent, or 5 per cent if you would prefer to use the older retail price index measure. Furthermore, it seems inflation will continue to rise for some time, with a growing expectation that the CPI index could pass 5 per cent. If inflation measured by the consumer price index is more than 1 full percentage point above the 2 per cent target, then the Bank of England governor does of course have to write a letter to the chancellor. Well, now it looks as if the CPI index could actually rise by more than 2 full percentage points above inflation.

Food inflation is up to a truly worrisome 12.3 per cent, with meat prices up 16.3 per cent, breads and cereals up 15.9 per cent and vegetables, including potatoes, up to 11.1 per cent from a year ago.

The average price of petrol at the pumps increased by 1.2 pence per litre between June and July this year, to stand at 118.8 pence, and air passenger transport costs rose by 8.9 per cent, from just 5.4 per cent a year earlier. The good news on gas and electricity: bills were unchanged this year, but they fell a year ago, so they too contributed towards the bottom line.

To really rub salt into the wound, the increase in inflation from 3.8 per cent in June to July’s 4.4 per cent was the highest change since records began in 1997.

inflation

The news from the pipeline is not good either. Yesterday saw the latest revelation of producer prices, and both input and output prices are still way too high at 30.1 and 10.2 per cent respectively and on a non seasonally adjusted basis.

But, at least the input price index fell slightly on the month before – although only very slightly.

producer prices

But remember this, annual inflation is determined by what goes on over the course of that year. When oil and food stop rising in price, it will take a year for this effect to be fully reflected in the figures, but when it is reflected, the result will be sharp falls indeed. And if food and oil prices continue to fall, as they have been doing over the last couple of weeks, CPI may even go negative.

Prices only go up in the long-term if there is sufficient excess money slopping around the system. Thanks to the credit crunch, fears about job security, and the squeeze on our discretionary disposable income, there is no spare money.

That is why it is likely the current inflationary spiral could turn to deflation.

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The battle of demand and supply

So, British gas announced its intention to raise gas prices by 35 per cent and electricity by 9 per cent. That will hurt. Meanwhile, the collapse in the price of oil seemed to come to a halt yesterday, and go back into an unfortunate reverse – as news that US stockpiles of oil had fallen led to a sharp $5 a barrel jump.

So that is it then, inflation is just taking off.

Yet, news from Incomes Data Services this morning revealed a fall in pay rises in the three months to June. The period saw average pay increases of 3.5 per cent, from 3.6 per cent during the three months to May.

We keep hearing about strikes making a comeback in the public sector, and how a wage inflation spiral could have its origin in the government controlled arena, at a time when the Gordon Brown regime dare not risk a confrontation. Yet the Incomes Data Services report revealed that the public sector received pay deals worth just 2.7 per cent during the period.

According to a report from KPMG, the number of firms planning to make job cuts has almost doubled in the last three months.

KPMG’s survey of senior executives in both public and private sector organisations indicates that more than half (53 per cent) now plan to reduce their staff headcount over the coming months, with a similar number (52 per cent) planning to implement recruitment freezes. Back in March 2008 when the same organisations were questioned for KPMG by Opinion Leader Research, only 29 per cent were looking at job cuts as a cost-saving measure.

It seems highly unlikely that in this environment of job uncertainty, wage inflation will take off. In fact, as the credit crunch deepens, wage deflation seems more likely to go negative. In fact, there has already been some anecdotal evidence to suggest some workers are being put under pressure to accept pay cuts. They are having to choose between pay cuts or losing their job altogether.

Yet, in yesterday’s FT, Kenneth Rogoff, a respected economist if ever there was one, for Mr Rogoff is a former chief economist at the IMF and now Professor of Economics at Harvard, banged the anti inflation drums.

He argued that the current idea of bailing out banks, and slashing interest rates to stimulate the economy, is flawed. “The world can not grow its way out of this slowdown” went the headline to his piece, and he said: “governments in every corner of the world showed themselves perfectly capable of achieving very high rates of inflation long before they had the assistance of modern unions.”

So what we have then is quite a dichotomy.

On the one hand, the forces of inflation are self-evident. On the other hand, there are good reasons to fear deflation, once the recent rises in oil and commodity prices have worked their way out of the system.

So we have economists such Mr Rogoff, and last week the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, arguing for an increase in the rate of interest to choke off inflation.

On the other hand, with asset prices in such freefall, there has to be a serious risk of anti inflationary measures backfiring and creating years of deflation – in a recession that could mirror the Japanese lost decade.

How do you reconcile these two views?

Well, actually, there is a reason for this divergence, and the reason is quite simple.

Not only is the economic world split down the middle, so is the real world too.

The UK and US, and countries such as Spain, and Australia – which by the way has joined us in seeing big falls in house prices, face the danger of deflation by the end of 2009 and beyond. In the BRIC countries – Brazil, Russia, India and China, inflation is still public enemy number one.

Well, maybe not in Russia; the official public enemy number one seems to be anything Western.

But in a way, Russian antipathy to Western corporate giants is a symptom of inflation. Public spending rose before the election which saw Dmitry Medvedev become the nation’s new President. This has helped stoke Russian inflation, but evil and greedy capitalists made a convenient scapegoat.

As the BRIC nations expand, yet more pressure is put on commodity prices – but the true cost of this in terms of inflation is being glossed over. In China you have the Olympics overriding all other concerns. You have the subsidy on oil, disguising the true cost. But you can’t hide problems for ever. They will always come back and bite you in the end.

If the likes of the US and UK do hit recession – then the result will surely be a big slowdown in international trade, which will hit China et al, the price of oil will fall – maybe even go into freefall. This will hit the Russian economy hard.

Economic theory would suggest the recovery will have its roots in this downturn – as cheaper commodity prices make us feel better off.

But, the danger is that the resulting recession could be self-reinforcing. As Keynes showed, economic depressions don’t fix themselves, or not for quite a long time, anyway. The last depression only really came to an end with the end of World War II.

So, while is true to say this economic crisis was caused initially by too much borrowing in the West, and can not be solved through borrowing more, it is also true that to let market forces take their natural course could be very dangerous – very dangerous indeed.

Which is why the ultimate solution to this crisis lies in some kind of middle ground. A slowdown, but not too much of a slowdown. A gradual move in the West from being greater spenders to being great savers – but only a gradual move.

Ultimately, the solution to this crisis lies in growing productivity enabling higher income – but without a corresponding rise in borrowing. Somehow, economic policy makers need to engineer that path. It does not lie in the policies advocated by Mr Rogoff.

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IMF: Global economy “better-than-expected”

It’s a bit like one of those cakes a child may make in your kitchen. It looks awful, crumbing in the middle, mess everywhere. But when you actually take a bite, well, it tastes pretty good.

Yesterday, the IMF talked the talk of gloom. But when you drill down into the report, well, it really was good news, at least good news by the standards of 2008.

“The IMF expects global growth to slow significantly in the second half of the year, before recovering gradually in 2009,” begins their latest report. We all know the developed world is under the cosh. But then the IMF added: “Expansions in emerging and developing economies are also expected to lose further steam.”

But the real gloom was on the twin perils of inflation and deflation. “The global economy is in a tough spot, caught between sharply slowing demand in many advanced economies and rising inflation everywhere, notably in emerging and developing economies.”

The IMF went on to predict growth slowing to virtually standstill in the US by the final quarter of this year.

So, why was the report good? Well, first of all, actually, all those comments made above are not new. But what is new is altogether more promising.

The IMF actually increased its projections for growth. When it last published a report of this type it had expected global growth this year of 3.7 per cent. Now it expects 4.1 per cent expansion. As for 2009, it upped its projections for next year by 0.1 percentage points.

The UK saw an upgraded projection too. It now expects growth this year and next of 1.8 followed by 1.7 per cent. Previously it had forecast 1.6 per cent both this year and next. And the US really did see the IMF smile down. Last April the powerful organization projected growth of just 0.5 per cent for 2008, now it thinks the economy will expand by 1.3 per cent.

Of the G7 economies, Italy is expected to be the weakest, but no major economy is expected to contract either this year or next.

As for the developing world, well it is good news across the board. China and India are expected to maintain their breathless rate of expansion, but the rest of the world is expected to do pretty well, even sub-Sahara Africa which is projected to expand by 6.6 per cent this year and 6.8 per cent next.

As far as inflation is concerned, the IMF seems to be more worried about the developing world, but positively sanguine on the West.

“In emerging and developing countries, inflationary pressures are mounting faster, fuelled by soaring commodity prices, above-trend growth, and accommodative macroeconomic policies. Hence, inflation forecasts for these economies have been raised by more than 1.5 percentage points in both 2008 and 2009, to 9.1 per cent and 7.4 per cent, respectively, and the moderation in inflation in 2009 will depend on more assertive tightening of monetary conditions,” said the IMF.

But turning its attention to the wealthier bit of the world said: “In advanced economies, inflation pressures are likely to be countered by slowing demand and, with commodity prices projected to stabilize, the expected increase in inflation for 2008 is forecast to be reversed in 2009.”

The markets reacted with glee to the IMF report. But we would like to add a note of caution. IMF projections for 2008 have really been up and down like a yo-yo. It seems probable they will change again. Their slightly more rosy outlook also seems to go against the grain. Of late, the doom and gloom has been mounting. House prices are falling faster than anyone had expected. Unemployment rising, and expected to rise much higher. Prices are jumping at their fastest level since the early 1990s, but manufacturers are struggling to pass their rising costs on. The banks are finding it increasingly harder to shore up their balance sheets; then there’s the rising price of food. And one more thing, what is it? That’s right, oil is priced at levels vastly in excess of prices that would have been considered unthinkable a year ago.

The longer the credit crunch continues, and oil is priced at levels of around $130, we think the chances of a recession increase. When the IMF last reported, oil had only just broken through the $100 a barrel level. It does a seem a little strange they should improve their projections at a time of such astonishing rises in the price of oil.

Yet, news on the black stuff really does come with a healthy dollop of hope this morning. Maybe, the IMF is right after all.

To find out why, read the next article.

IMF projections for global growth July 2008 
  2006 2007 Projected 2008 Projected 2009
World 5.1 5.0 4.1 3.9
US 2.9 2.2 1.3 0.8
UK 2.9 3.1 1.8 1.7
Germany 2.9 2.5 2 1
France 2.2 2.2 1.6 1.4
Japan 2.4 2.1 1.5 1.5
Italy 1.8 1.5 0.5 0.5
Spain 3.9 3.8 1.8 1.2
China 11.6 11.9 9.7 9.8
India 9.8 9.8 8.0 8.0
Brazil 3.8 5.4 4.9 4.0
Russia 7.4 8.1 7.7 7.3
Sub- Saharan Africa 6.4 7.2 6.6 6.8
IMF projections for consumer prices
Advanced economies 2.4 2.2 3.4 2.3
Emerging and developing economies 5.4 6.4 9.1 7.4
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US inflation hits highest level since 1990

It is difficult to say it better than Capital Economics did yesterday. “The news on headline CPI inflation couldn’t have been much worse,” said Paul Ashworth, senior US economist at the consultancy.

Consumer prices rose by no less than 1.1 per cent in just one month in June. Energy prices rose by a simply staggering 6.6 per cent – that’s one month, remember.

The annual inflation rate hit 5 per cent. You would have to rewind the clock back all the way to 1990 to see the last time inflation in the US was that high.

Yet, inflation with food and energy taken out really wasn’t that bad. Prices were up 0.3 per cent in June, taking the annual rate to 2.4 per cent.

Combine that news on inflation with the sentiments expressed in the latest set of minutes from the Fed’s last interest rate setting meeting, published yesterday, and you could be forgiven for assuming that US interest rates are about to rise.

The minutes said a “firming in policy would be appropriate very soon.”

It may have only been a couple of weeks ago when the Fed last sat and deliberated, but the picture has got a lot more gloomy since then. Since then the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac news has broken. Markets have tumbled, the US banking crisis has deepened. The Fed now has all guns firing, trying to avert a deepening crisis.

The feeling is that despite inflationary worries, rate cuts, maybe several, will follow.

Does this mean inflation in the future? Well, in the longer term inflation occurs when demand is higher than supply. And frankly, looking at the state of the US economy, it seems unlikely demand will create inflationary pressures for a very long time.

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Inflation surges again, but wages go nowhere

And that devilish dilemma got a lot more devilish yesterday.

Inflation is up again. Now the CPI rate is 3.8 per cent. The highest level in 11 years. The retail price index was up to 4.6 per cent, and even core inflation with alcohol, tobacco and food taken out hit 1.6 per cent.

Food and non-alcoholic drinks leapt up by 9.5 per cent, petrol by even more. Now, it is widely expected CPI inflation will hit 4 per cent soon.

And yet. Wages during the same period also rose by 3.8 per cent. Interestingly, wage inflation both with and without bonuses was exactly the same this month.

The last time average earnings with bonuses rose lower than that was August last year. As for earnings before bonuses, they rose at their lowest rate since January.

The point is this. Despite media talk of a winter of discontent building, of strikes as unions spoil it all and demands of inflation-busting wage increases, up to now there is no sign of a secondary inflationary effect from rising wages at all.

Economic productivity is up around 1.7 per cent, so if you take productivity from wage inflation you get the true impact wages must be having on inflation. Right now, that is 2.1 per cent; just 0.1 percentage points off the Bank of England target.

The truth is we are not seeing real inflation at all. We are seeing rising prices. We are all getting worse off. That is not the same thing as inflation, or at least not the same thing as sustained inflation.

If prices rise and wages don’t keep up, we feel worse off. Demand falls. Prices then fall too. This is what is happening now. It will just take time for this to be reflected in the inflation data.

inflation

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Manufacturers feel squeeze, retailers feel their scream

The two-ended squeeze continues.     Manufacturers’ inflation continues to rise at a breakneck pace.  Meanwhile, the latest data from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) on High Street sales at last backs up what most of us would have expected anyway.

Manufacturers saw the price of goods they are buying rise by a stunning 30.3 per cent in the year to June.  And it is not just food and oil that are surging.  Even with those two variable factors taken out, prices paid by manufacturers leapt by 15.4 per cent in the year.  To put that in context, a year ago this measure rose by just 2.7 per cent.

But what really counts, at least as far as High Street inflation is concerned, is what manufacturers are charging their customers, their output costs.  In June, year on year output costs rose at their highest level ever recorded, up 10 per cent exactly. 

And it really is a problem for manufacturers.  Sure, they need to up prices in order to cover their own higher raw material costs, but they can’t pass on these higher costs in full, demand is just not there.   

So we are seeing a double whammy.  On the one hand, hard-strapped manufacturers are having to swallow most of their rising costs.  But on the other hand, they are passing enough of these costs on for their customers to feel the heat too. 

input output costs

You may recall, a few weeks ago the Office for National Statistics (ONS) totally threw everyone when it revealed data to suggest the High Street saw its strongest year on year growth in May since the 1980s.  

How can that be?  The latest news from M&S and John Lewis should be enough to suggest that data is wrong.  And yet, curiously, the BRC recorded pretty good conditions in May too – and said it had something to do with good weather.  Remember that, you may dimly be able to recall we a had a week or so of sunshine in May.

But yesterday, the BRC revealed data for June, and this time it was much closer to what you would expect.  BRC had like for like sales down 0.4 per cent on last June.   It had like for likes in the three month period from April to June down by 0.3 per cent.

To be honest, the falls reported are not that great.    It is surprising the High Street remained as strong as it did.  Even so, sales are clearly on the fall, and one assumes this trend will continue.

And that brings this story to the contradictory nature of this economic slowdown.  The High Street is waning, therefore you would expect prices to fall.    But retailers’ costs must be rising.  We know this because firstly the ONS data reported above says manufacturers are charging them more.  Secondly, the falling pound must make overseas goods more expensive.

So, on one hand, we have deflationary pressure; on the other hand, inflationary pressure, which is why right now, the interest rate setters at the Bank of England have this massive dilemma.

But the real danger must lie in potential job losses.  When costs are rising, but demand is falling, companies need to think of other ways to reduce costs.  And the most obvious way is through job cuts.  That is why we have concluded that deflation is a bigger danger in the longer-term than inflation.  And why we are fast reaching the point when the Bank of England needs to show real courage, and drop interest rates at a time of high, at least high by recent standards, inflation.
BRC

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Deflation beckons

The real danger right now, is that we could be worrying about the wrong thing.

Last week, the British Retail Consortium said that food inflation in the UK had hit 7 per cent in May, from the year before.   

Unless you have just arrived after spending the best part of the noughties on Mars, you will know the price of oil has been rising quite a bit of late.    In fact, a couple of weeks ago it went close to $150, meaning that it has almost quadrupled in price since the time we first started taking about how expensive oil is getting.

The Bank of International Settlements, which is a little like the central bank to central banks, thinks interest rates should go up around the world, in order to curb demand for oil.

Yet, consider this.  Last week, Bloomberg quoted Societe Generale’s Albert Edwards, a highly respected global strategist, as saying, “Inflation fears are overdone and the deflation threat could reappear, prompted by a global recession and collapse in the commodity bubble.”

But Mr Edwards is not alone; earlier this month, three economists produced a report warning that deflation was more likely than runaway inflation.

We have argued here before that the price of oil is bound to fall back eventually.  It is just not affordable at current levels.   Sure, in China and other Asia countries oil is heavily subsidized, distorting the market, but countries such as China are heavily reliant on overseas trade.  And these days trade is a complex affair.    Raw materials are shipped from one country to another.  Component goods might be made in one country.  Another may actually carry out the assembly.    When trade is like that, the cost of transporting goods is key.  And while shipping costs are quite modest, there is a real danger that oil at current prices will hit export countries hard, regardless of their internal subsidies.

In the US and UK, there are signs that high oil is hurting everywhere, including on the roads, where demand for fuel efficient cars is rising, while sales of big gas guzzlers are falling as fast as house prices.

Oil will surely fall back eventually.  So too will the cost of food.  Surely bad harvests can not continue.  Surely, at current profitability levels, farmers will invest more in improving productivity.

Russia has the potential to become the world’s food basket.  An opportunity it is sure to make the most of, by ramping up production.

There is no sign of wages increasing.  Instead, unions are more worried about job losses.

Meanwhile, the economic slowdown in the West is sure to lead to lower demand, which usually leads to lower inflation.

Take as an example, this report from Verdict.  Last week, Verdict said, “British consumers are more disloyal than ever before with the retailers they use.”  Its research found that across retail as a whole, some 10.8m shoppers are disloyal to the stores they use; and, across every retail sector, more consumers are saying that they would prefer to use an alternative store to the one they currently use most.”

In other words, retailers can not rely on loyalty like they used to.  This means they have to look at ways of ensuring their customers come back.  Price will surely be their key weapon.

Bear in mind, it takes time for a change in monetary policy to influence inflation.    What the Bank of England does now, will influence prices in two years’ time.

Maybe, then, it is time to slash rates.  Maybe now is the time for the government to scrap Gordon’s beloved rules of prudence and borrow money to fund tax cuts to try and kick life into the economy.

Deflation is much harder to fight than inflation.  The time for that battle to begin is very soon.

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