While the press is filled with stories about the biggest oil supply shock ever and crippling gasoline prices, the economic data look fine so far. Nonetheless, I’m getting more, not less, worried.
So far, so good
The business press is loaded with stories about how the rise in energy (and related) prices is a huge shock to the economy. There are endless articles about how $4/gal gasoline prices are devastating to households. And perhaps warning comes from none other than the International Energy Agency. They are all over the press arguing that this is “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.”
And yet, seemingly miraculously, the US economy seems fine. Most March indicators were solid. Payrolls surprised to the upside and jobless claims remain low by historical standards. suggesting low layoffs. The various purchasing managers indexes are healthy. The only ugly data is the chronically weak consumer confidence surveys. Overall, trendlike growth of 2% or so seems to continue. What gives?
Time
The first thing to note is that there are lags between the onset of the shock and the impact on the data. It takes time to change behavior—people tend to look through temporary shocks. Moreover, current data releases measure where the economy was in the middle of March. April data should show some (small) impact.
A small shock so far
Despite the warnings from the IEA, so far this is a small shock by historical comparisons. It makes no sense to measure an oil shock looking only at the peak amount of supply disrupted. The duration of the disruption is more important. It is the cumulative amount of oil taken off the market that matters. A short disruption is cushioned by inventories and the consumer response to a short price spike will be small. The size and duration of today’s price shock isn’t even close the recent Russian shock, let alone the 1970s oil shocks (chart).


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