·
Both
Canada and the United Kingdom reported lower than expected core
inflation for November. In Canada, core inflation excluding food
and energy was 1.76% while headline inflation was 2.47%. In the
UK, comparable figures were 1.47% and 2.13%. Core and headline
inflation rates for the U.K. and Canada are shown in the first and
second charts. In the United States, on the other hand, the
November rises in the core and headline inflation rates, announced
earlier, were greater than expected. The core inflation rate was
2.33% and the headline 4.31%. Fears of stagflation--slow or
no growth and inflation--are being surfacing. Former Federal
Reserve Board Chairman, Greenspan, speaking on ABC's "This
Week" program on December 15, said "We are beginning to get
not stagflation, but the early symptoms of it." ·
Core inflation, usually defined as
headline inflation excluding energy and food, is frequently the target
of a Central Bank's monetary policy. Over time, the theory goes,
rises or falls in the prices of food and energy tend to be offset by
subsequent falls or rises in these prices. Exclusion of these
items gives a better picture of underlying inflation. However,
there are times when it may be prudent to focus not on core inflation
but on the broader headline inflation. In stagflation it is the
headline series that matters. The current rise in commodity prices
is due less to a cyclical shortage of supply that will be corrected by a
cyclical increase in production in the coming months than it is to a
structural shift in world demand for food and energy, engendered, in
large part, by the rapid growth of the emerging economies, especially,
China. Yesterday, December 17, for example, the price of a bushel
of wheat almost reached $10, its highest price on record. Soybeans also marked a record at $11.14 a
bushel. Even the price
of corn, which had declined earlier in the year was up to $4.10 on
December 17. The daily prices of corn, wheat and soybeans over the
last two years are shown in the third chart.
|