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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 04, 2025
Inflation bites us all again after the economy roars back

Panorama

Simon Kennedy, Bloomberg
12 December, 2021, 01:55 pm
Last modified: 12 December, 2021, 01:56 pm

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Inflation bites us all again after the economy roars back

We look back at our defining events of the year. 2021 witnessed a much faster rebound than most had anticipated

Simon Kennedy, Bloomberg
12 December, 2021, 01:55 pm
Last modified: 12 December, 2021, 01:56 pm
6 September, London. After 18 months away, brokers returned to the red leather couches of the London Metal Exchange’s floor, where they set benchmark prices for copper and aluminum by screaming orders at one another. Photo: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
6 September, London. After 18 months away, brokers returned to the red leather couches of the London Metal Exchange’s floor, where they set benchmark prices for copper and aluminum by screaming orders at one another. Photo: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

It was the best of recoveries, it was the worst of recoveries. A year after the coronavirus catapulted the world economy into its deepest recession on record, 2021 witnessed a much faster rebound than most had anticipated. Yet, that too posed its challenges.

An analysis of 147 recessions since 1980 by UBS suggests the pickup in investment and hiring has broken the mold, while consumer spending has also roared back. The Swiss bank reckons that while global gross domestic product still undershoots where it would have been without Covid-19, it's on course to make up the lost ground at some point next year. That's sooner than was predicted earlier in the pandemic.

Behind the bounce was the successful provision of vaccinations and the ending of lockdowns that reengaged so much of the world economy. It was helped by massive stimulus from central banks, coupled with welfare programs, tax cuts and government spending that proved longer lasting than the slump triggered by the global financial crisis.

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Labour markets tightened dramatically. The US unemployment rate is now 4.2 percent compared with more than 14.8 percent at the nadir of 2020. Wages climbed in turn, with some companies facing skills shortages saying they would pay workers more than before the pandemic. And employers are showing a willingness to allow a combination of working from home and at the office, not least as a way of retaining staff.

Those who own assets have also had reason to celebrate. 

The MSCI World Index of stocks is up about 20 percent from a year ago, and multiple housing markets have soared, some to records. Plus, there's money saved up during lockdown by those who kept on working or were furloughed.

Still, not all have shared in the upswing, and the bigger picture obscures ongoing struggles. Some economists call the recovery K-shaped.

Emerging markets, in particular, lagged their richer peers, in part because access to vaccinations wasn't as easy. The International Monetary Fund predicts that total output in the advanced world will exceed its pre-crisis growth path by 2024 — but the emerging world, apart from China, will undershoot that target by 5.5 percent.

The rapid recovery also left economies short of supplies and staff. Ports from Los Angeles to Shanghai became congested, while labour markets ran low on some skills and companies battled to get hold of vital materials such as semiconductors.

With that came an explosion in inflation, which is proving more stubborn than most economists predicted and is curbing the purchasing power of those on low wages. Central bankers are nervously eyeing the pickup in prices.

Some emerging market powerhouses, including Russia and Brazil, have already hiked interest rates.

As ever, all eyes are on the US Federal Reserve. It had begun to slow monthly bond purchases, but is now set to pick up the pace. However, the question captivating investors is how soon it will raise its key interest rate from near zero, the record low it reached at the height of the crisis. 

For most of 2020, Chair Jerome Powell argued that the inflation spike was "transitory." Lately he has been acknowledging that the price pressures seem more enduring.

The dilemma for Powell and his counterparts is how to respond without curtailing the much-needed growth in the virus-hit economy. Raise rates now, or risk having to come down harder on inflation later? That will be the economic tale of 2022.

Simon Kennedy. Illustration: TBS
Simon Kennedy. Illustration: TBS

Simon Kennedy is an Executive Editor at Bloomberg.


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement.

Features

inflation / Global Economic Recovery

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