How the '3 Ds' are leading to a structural shift in inflation

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By Tim Pickering

There was in the summer what we called a “misguided level of comfort that governments and central banks were communicating” given year-over-year inflation had recently fallen: the consumer price index in the United States had dropped to 3.2 per cent (increase) after peaking in June 2022 at 9.1 per cent. What’s happened since? We are still at 3.2 per cent.

Bloomberg recently captured the sentiment, “U.S. consumers are shouldering a burden unlike anything seen in decades — even as the pace of price increases has slowed.” Importantly, prices are still increasing, albeit at a slower rate — little comfort.

The real inflation consumers feel is higher than the narrow view of CPI. Per Bloomberg, “Groceries are up 25 per cent since January 2020. Same with electricity. Used-car prices have climbed 35 per cent, auto insurance 33 per cent and rents roughly 20 per cent.”

Perhaps we need to accept a new normal, which is an inflation level more typical (that is, higher) by historical standards, closer to the average four per cent since 1970. We are not advocating that inflation and thus interest rates are headed to levels we had in the 1970s, but we can all agree this inflation is not transitory, the narrative by central banks and politicians.

Its persistence is up for debate, but we know that central banks raising rates does not solely make inflation go away. Cost-push inflation driven by commodity prices and wages point to a structural shift based on supply and demand after a decade of declining capex (investment) in commodity supply and a series of generational catalysts. We believe what we are experiencing is typical with inflation migrating through the system and showing up in unexpected ways.

Catalysts and the 3 Ds

Decarbonization, deglobalization and demographics are inflationary drivers that weren’t present just a few years back.

Consider decarbonization: though the desire to “build back better” is noble, we are constantly reminded how critical fossil fuels still are today. The transition away, while presenting potential long-term benefits, comes with tightening supply and increased prices and volatility at a time when the developing world is increasing consumption. This push towards decarbonization became forefront post-COVID-19 and presents long-term inflationary pressure.

Deglobalization and the trend towards protectionism is also new, largely on the back of the war in Ukraine, COVID-19 and U.S./China tensions. It leads to a global economic environment that’s regional and less competitive, causing prices to rise — a type of structural inflation that central banks can’t control by raising rates.