In his Jackson Hole speech in August, US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made clear that curbing inflation is the Fed’s top priority. While the Fed has distanced itself from its assessment last year that the inflation pickup would be short-lived, the grounds for that assessment were tenuous even when made, given the many uncertainties about the drivers of inflation at the time.
One such driver, in particular, rising shipping costs, has been under-studied, despite being an important contributor to — and predictor of — inflation. Even last year, the surge in shipping costs was a canary in the coal mine pointing to the need for higher interest rates to counter building price pressures.
The mandate of the world’s major central banks is to maintain price stability, which means that monetary policymakers need to identify the sources of inflation and anticipate its trajectory. Central bankers undoubtedly missed the mark by initially dismissing the sharp increase in inflation in 2021 as “transitory,” as Powell once did. But other institutions also made the same mistake. The International Monetary Fund (IMF), for example, likewise failed to anticipate the pickup and durability of inflation. Its macroeconomic forecasts for the United States were similar to the Fed’s projections.
The IMF figures also underscore the extent to which the inflation surprise had a global dimension, affecting countries around the world from Australia to the United Kingdom, where policymakers were caught off guard. The IMF’s Spring 2022 World Economic Outlook shows that its inflation projections from a year earlier were off by a factor of more than three for advanced economies and by a factor of more than two for developing and emerging-market economies, as well as for the world as a whole.
To be fair, part of the current inflation is being driven by factors that were not foreseeable a year ago, or whose impact was difficult to predict with precision. In the US, soaring prices reflect fiscal stimulus and the unwinding of pandemic-era savings on the demand side, as well as supply-chain disruptions related to China’s zero-Covid policy and commodity-price increases owing to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Economic forecasters are not geopolitical or public-health experts, and the best they can do on both fronts is to make an educated guess.
But while policymakers may get a pass for not factoring into their decisions what was unknowable a year ago, they should be held accountable for factors that were known drivers of inflation, especially if those drivers pointed to enduring price pressures. In a recent study, my co-authors and I focus on one such driver of inflation: the rapid increase in global shipping costs.
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By October 2021, indicators of the cost of shipping containers by maritime freight had increased by over 600% from their pre-pandemic levels, while the cost of shipping bulk commodities by sea had more than tripled.
What caused this remarkable increase? As manufacturing activity picked up following extended Covid-19 lockdowns, demand for shipping intermediate inputs (like energy and raw materials) by sea increased significantly.
At the same time, shipping capacity was severely constrained by logistical hurdles and bottlenecks (often related to pandemic disruptions) and shortages of container equipment. Ports around the world lacked workers who had to self-isolate after testing positive for Covid-19, and public-health restrictions prevented truck drivers and ship crews from crossing borders.
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While skyrocketing food and energy prices were making headlines, the surge in shipping costs seemed to pass largely under the radar, despite its potential inflationary impact. My study shows that the effects of the transport-cost shock on inflation are longer-lasting than those from the commodity shock, contradicting claims made last year that the increase in inflation would be ephemeral.
My analysis suggests that a doubling of shipping costs leads to an increase of roughly 0.7% in the inflation rate a year later. Given the actual increase in global shipping costs during 2021, I estimate the impact on inflation a year later to be over two percentage points — a huge effect that few central banks would dismiss in setting monetary policy.
Of course, this average result varies across economies and regions. It depends on monetary-policy frameworks, particularly central banks’ track record of stabilising prices and anchoring expectations, as well as on more structural features such as geography, which affects an economy’s remoteness and dependence on goods shipped by sea. The evidence suggests that developed countries with established price-stability credentials, including the US, would likely be less affected by shipping-cost shocks.
On the other hand, developing countries — especially remote, small-island states in the Pacific and the Caribbean — are at greater risk of experiencing larger, more persistent inflationary pressures, which could generate wage-price spirals. When shipping costs surge, policymakers everywhere — especially in such countries — may need to tighten their monetary policy preemptively.
Shipping costs’ role as a driver of global inflation is under-recognised. This needs to change. Shipping-cost shocks can alert central banks tasked with ensuring price stability of dangers ahead and help them to reduce the risk of falling behind the inflation curve. — © Project Syndicate 2022
Jonathan D. Ostry, professor of the practice of economics at Georgetown University, is a research fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research in London. He is a former deputy research director at the IMF and previously led the team that produces the IMF’s flagship World Economic Outlook