How the World Works

Inflation throws a sucker punch

It's beginning to look like the United States might actually need a recession, just to keep inflation at bay. The latest eye-popping numbers from the Department of Labor show the "producer price index" (PPI) jumping 1.2 percent in July. That's a year-over-year jump of 9.8 percent -- the fastest acceleration in 27 years. In early trading on the New York Stock Exchange, investors panicked -- the Dow dropped over a hundred points in the first hour.

The PPI measures prices paid to producers of goods. The only good news to take away from these numbers is that they are clearly a reflection of the run-up in energy costs earlier this year, and now that energy costs are on their way down, pressure might start to ease.

But that's just hopeful thinking. Living in the now, the new inflation numbers are tailor-made for a presidential candidate who might want to indulge in some timely economic populism. Life in the United States is basically 10 percent more expensive than it was last year at this time -- a point that was underlined to me on a JetBlue flight yesterday, where headphones are no longer free and a pillow and blanket costs $7. And don't bother bringing cash. JetBlue only accepts major credit cards for payment now.

Think about it -- the first presidential candidate to promise a future in which bottled water and pillows are free on all domestic flights wins the election, hands down.

Posted in: Economy

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Recent Posts

Obama: "A clean break from a troubled past"
The president-elect makes his case to the nation for immediate action on the economy. Let's hope Senate Republicans were listening.
Even Wal-Mart gets the blues
Cutbacks in discretionary spending take their toll, even at the "low-price leader"
How humans cooled the earth -- 500 years ago
After pandemics caused a mass die-off in the New World, farmland turned to forest and temperatures dropped

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