Is inflation making a comeback?
By Peter Diekmeyer Bankrate.com
Last week, the Bank of Canada surprised analysts
by keeping its policy lending rate steady at three percent. Canada's economy has been showing signs of weakness, and many thought that a
rate cut was in order. By signalling that interest rates ought to be lower, the central bank could easily have sparked a new round of
borrowing and consumption that would have provided the economy a nice boost. So, why didn't it?
The problem is that the Bank of Canada maintains a steady balancing act between maintaining a smoothly running economy and
keeping inflation under control.
That's getting much harder because a wide variety of inflationary pressures have emerged recently. These range from rising
fuel and food prices to slowing growth in outsourcing to rising transportation costs and loose monetary policy at many of the world's major
central banks. And as bad as these are, things could get worse. Much worse.
Inflation: is a good run coming to an end?
Canadians have had a good run on the inflation front for some time
now. Prices for most goods and services we buy have increased only
gradually for most of the past quarter-century. Even house prices,
which have risen quite quickly over the past eight years, rose far
more moderately when looked at over a longer stretch. In other sectors,
such as manufacturing imports from emerging nations, prices have
even fallen.
As recently as the first quarter of 2008, core inflation
in Canada was running at just 1.4 percent in real terms and total
inflation was just 1.8 percent. But last week, the Bank of Canada
raised its forecast for total Consumer Price Index, or CPI, inflation
by later this year to three percent.
According to Jeff Rubin and Benjamin Tal, two economists at CIBC World Markets, one of the reasons that inflation has
been kept under control so well in Western countries is that outsourcing by Western manufacturers and rising imports from low-wage
countries like China have kept price increases in line.
However, those imports are now being threatened by rising fuel costs. "Higher energy prices are impacting transport
costs at an unprecedented rate. So much so, that the cost of moving goods, not the cost of tariffs, is the largest barrier to global
trade today," write the two in a recent paper for the bank's clients. "(These) exploding transportation costs are removing the single
most important brake on inflation over the last decade -- wage arbitrage with China."
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