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Home Front Economy
Food and energy costs lead wholesale prices to soar in March
2008-04-16
Inflation at the wholesale level soared in March at nearly triple the rate that had been expected as the costs of energy and food both climbed rapidly. The Labor Department reported Tuesday that wholesale prices rose by 1.1 percent last month, the largest increase since a 2.6 percent rise last November, which had been the biggest one-month jump in 33 years. Analysts had been expecting a much more moderate 0.4 percent rise in wholesale prices for the month.

Core inflation, which excludes energy and food, was better behaved last month, rising by just 0.2 percent, down from a worrisome 0.5 percent rise in February. For the past 12 months, wholesale prices are up by 6.9 percent and core inflation is up by 2.7 percent, the biggest year-over-year increase in nearly two years.

The inflation pressures are occurring at a time when the overall economy is slowing and many analysts believe may have toppled into a recession. That raises concerns that the country could be facing another bout of stagflation, the malady that last occurred in the 1970s when economic growth stagnated but inflation kept rising.

Such a development would put the Federal Reserve in a bind. The central bank has been cutting interest rates in an effort to combat the current slowdown. However, if inflation pressures keep rising, it might be forced to stop cutting interest rates for fear that it would make inflation worse.

For March, energy prices jumped 2.9 percent, the biggest increase since November. The price of gasoline was up 1.3 percent while natural gas rose by 4.2 percent. Home heating oil shot up by 13.1 percent and diesel fuel, used to power the nation's trucking fleet, increased by 15.3 percent.
Posted by:Fred

#5  Bright Pebbles, according to the latest issue of Businessweek, you British are actually carrying a higher personal debt load than are we Americans. I don't disagree about sneezes and pneumonia, though. You might be surprised at how much Americans have put away into retirement investment accounts, though, which for some reason are never included as savings for this kind of thing.
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-04-16 21:23  

#4  It will be bad for the rest of the world, but I think that Americans will be hardest hit this time.

You've spent far to much of your future income (i.e. got into debt) and not used it for investment where it wouldn't be a problem.

If it's any schardenfreudian consolation the U.K. will be worse than the U.S.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-04-16 13:49  

#3  The falling dollar is a pay cut for Americans v the rest-of-the-world.

When America sneezes, the rest of the world catches pneumonia. It's going to be interesting to watch the expansion in China flatten out and the social repercussions.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-04-16 08:40  

#2  The falling dollar is a pay cut for Americans v the rest-of-the-world.

Falling affordability AKA higher prices are the result.

Ben should start raising interest rates.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-04-16 07:07  

#1  TOPIX > CHOSUN ILBO - looks like new SOKOR Prez LEE desires to secure and contract ARABLE FARM LAND in nations outside of SOKOR proper, e.g. SIBERIA + SE ASIA, and ostensibly to help feed NOKOR's starving masses. Speculates that NOKOR farmers-laborers by international agreement could hypothetically be allowed to travel, reside, and work in SIBERIA, etc, for the anti-Famnine benefit of NOKOR - SOKOR can also benefit nationally from such guaranty of [major]outside food sources. ARTICLE - LEE INFERS STRONG PERSONAL BELIEF IN INEVITABLE NK-SK REUNIFICATION.

HUMANITARIANISM? FOOD NATIONALISM = FOOD IMPERIALISM = OWG GLOBAL FOOD ORDER???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-04-16 00:29  

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