Look, there’s no way to sugarcoat the import price figures that were released today. They stunk to high heaven. Some
details:
* Overall import prices surged 2.8% in March, well above the 2% rise that was expected. If you strip out
petroleum, you still get a very large 1.1% rise. Strip out all fuels? Prices were up 0.9%, the biggest since this data
category started being reported in 2001.
* The year-over-year rate of import inflation is up to a whopping 14.8%. That is up
from 13.4% a month earlier and the highest rate in U.S. history (data goes back to 1982; shown
above).
string of increases after persistent declines. In other words, emerging markets and countries like China have gone from exporting deflation to exporting inflation. The Wall Street Journal had a good story to this effect yesterday.
indicator, that we shouldn’t care about the increases, blah, blah, blah. Yet almost every month, the dollar loses more
value, commodity prices climb, and import price inflation surges. Eventually, the Fed
may be forced to pick its poison — keep targeting growth by cutting rates and flooding the system with money or
putting its foot down and targeting inflation. Alternatively, the dollar will need to
bottom out and turn around — something we haven’t seen happen yet (the Dollar Index is down another 32 bps as I
write)
seeing it in their everyday lives. The University of Michigan’s consumer confidence index dropped even further in April
– to 63.2 from 69.5 a month earlier. That’s the worst reading going all the way back to March
1982.
4.8%). Consumers haven’t expected a higher inflation rate since July 1982. More proof
of stagflation? Sure looks like it.
Related posts:
- Import price inflation surges 15.4%! This week is a biggie on the inflation front, with import price data out this morning and the Consumer...
- Retail sales okay, import prices weak We’re getting some more U.S. economic data and the tone overall is okay. Retail sales dropped 1.5% in September as...
- University of Michigan survey: Confidence dow… The Federal Reserve continues to face an ugly dilemma: The growth numbers don’t look good, but the inflation numbers are...



{ 0 comments… add one now }