Wednesday, November 23, 2005

 

Energy Prices Mask Deflation: JPM Economist

The Dallas News explores just how much inflation is out there. "A J.P. Morgan senior economist recently explored this paradox in a short piece titled, 'When the CPI Isn't About Inflation.' Energy prices, he noted, are up by 52 percent in the last two years. Compare that to the annual growth in the consumer price index, which had crept up to 2 percent from 1 percent in 2003, but has since started falling again."

"'Imagine what inflation trends would be if energy prices had been stable,' Mr. Glassman suggested. To satisfy his imagination, Mr. Glassman calculated that CPI growth would be close to zero by now if not for energy. Take it out of the picture, along with areas directly affected by higher energy prices, such as taxi and air fares, paper products and certain processed foods, and you're flirting with deflation, or falling prices."

"'If rising energy prices were the result of strong demand rather than underinvestment by the oil industry, why is demand not providing the same support for other prices?' he asked. 'Instead, more costly energy is squeezing household budgets, leaving little for other purchases. Many businesses are forced to hold the line because their customers cannot support higher prices.'"

"Like it or not, that's where the Federal Reserve's true dilemma lies. Stagnating prices are indicative of an economy that is far sicker than what meets the eye. 'Inflation low enough that the central bank has no desire to push it lower is one of the most significant economic developments since the end of World War II,' Mr. Glassman added."

"And that gets us back to the housing market, the economy's main engine of both growth and jobs in the last five years. Recent data that show a slowing housing sector hold deep implications for the future of inflation. Not only will wages suffer. Like the dot-com industry that created tons of jobs just to take them away, housing will claim a great many casualties in the years to come."

"But other business supported by housing will also lose what little pricing power they've had in recent years. To envision what's to come, imagine anything you buy to fill a home. Now picture it on sale."

Comments:
"But other business supported by housing will also lose what little pricing power they've had in recent years. To envision what's to come, imagine anything you buy to fill a home. Now picture it on sale."

COOL! I am *so* ready to redecorate. Especially if I can hire competant tradesmen at reasonable rates.

But I'm not sure that I'm buying the premise in this story. Energy costs are not properly reflected in the CPI, and I see pricing power holding up in a number of areas that are "hedonically" adjusted out of the CPI.
 
Don Coxe Nov 26th CC
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2005/11/don-coxe-nov-26th-cc.html

Everone should listen to Coxe's latest call.
I posted a summary on my blog.
Mish
 
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