American inflation tops forecasts yet again, adding to recession risks
The Fed is under pressure to crank up interest rates more aggressively
At this point upside surprises in inflation occur with such frequency that surprise is probably the wrong word for them. So it was with America’s consumer price index (cpi) for June, published on July 13th. It soared 9.1% compared with a year earlier, marking yet another four-decade high and beating forecasts for an 8.8% increase. Still, investors seemed to be caught unawares, with stocks falling sharply after the data, adding to this year’s big losses. The pessimism in financial markets is easily understood: persistently high inflation is forcing the Federal Reserve to press on with aggressive monetary tightening, even at the potential cost of a recession.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “On the up and up”
Finance & economics July 16th 2022
- How higher interest rates will squeeze government budgets
- American inflation tops forecasts yet again, adding to recession risks
- The ECB’s masterplan to manipulate markets
- Why markets really are less certain than they used to be
- The legacy of Abe Shinzo will shape Japan’s economy for years
- Inflation shows both the value and limits of monetary-policy rules
More from Finance & economics
Europe could be torn apart by new divisions
The continent is at its most vulnerable in decades
How corporate bonds fell out of fashion
The market is at its hottest in years—and a shadow of its former self
An American purchase of Greenland could be the deal of the century
The economics of buying new territory
China’s markets take a fresh beating
Authorities have responded by bossing around investors
Can America’s economy cope with mass deportations?
Production slowdowns, more imports and pricier housing could follow
Would an artificial-intelligence bubble be so bad?
A new book by Byrne Hobart and Tobias Huber argues there are advantages to financial mania