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In our previous note we broke down the main driver of cyclical inflation (credit driven demand). Today we’re going to run through how this inflationary period is historically unique and what tools we use that tell us where prices are headed next.
To review, back in 2009, even with all the QE, inflation stayed muted because there was no mechanism to get that newly created money out into the pockets of consumers. It just sat on bank balance sheets, so demand remained anemic while lots of capacity in the system sat idle.
Contrast that with what we’ve experienced over the past 18-months and the environment couldn’t be more different.
This chart from Bridgewater shows the incredibly large spread between US nominal goods demand and the real production of goods. As you can see, in 2021 demand so far outstripped available supply that this spread rose above its previous all-time highs reached in the early 70s.
The reason for this stark difference is that this time around, the US embarked on fiscal QE in addition to financial QE. The federal government gave cash directly to consumers which led to an immediate and significant rise in spending (demand).
And while most pointed to inflation being caused by the supply chain bottlenecks from rolling COVID lockdowns in China and the Russian invasion of Ukraine… we can see on the chart above that these were not the predominant drivers of the supply/demand mismatch. It was, in fact, too much of a good thing causing demand to rise well above any available supply.
This isn’t to say that the supply side (a country’s capacity for production of goods and services) can’t play a significant role. It often does. (On the chart above we can see the effects of the 73’ Oil embargo on the US.)
But the impacts tend to be limited in duration — they have a low and slow burn over time.