If you talk to members or read articles of the mainstream economic faith, they often imply to you that money printing does NOT lead to inflation. Aside, any discussion about consumer price inflation has mechanically been viewed as strictly a “supply side” issue.
Of course despite their rabid denials, price inflation has been very much present given that central banks around have been jointly blowing bubbles to ensure that bankrupt governments stay afloat.
The mainstream hardly recognizes that first we see monetary inflation expressed via booming asset prices, next we see the same dynamic eventually spillover to consumer inflation.
Since inflation is a political process and represents part of the grand political scheme of financial repression, the effects on the markets and the economy runs in different phases or stages too. Central bank manipulation of money and credit affect specific prices of assets and of goods and services in relative scale and time periods.
We are seeing such phenomenon at work even in the US
Cost of fresh produce are expected to move significantly higher according to a Wall Street Journal report. This supposedly has been to a “three year drought in California” where the report adds that higher cost of fresh produce will lead to “overall food cost gains are expected to accelerate this year”
The Zero Hedge shows of spiraling prices beef, pork and shrimp. Note these are long term trends. But the recent rate of increases seem to have accelerated.
Another Wall Street Journal chart shows the spreading price inflation in basic commodities
In the US, food accounts for 14.9% of the CPI basket according to Doug Short.
The US Bureau of Labor reported last April 15th of the changes in US CPI stating that the “increases in the shelter and food indexes accounted for most of the seasonal adjusted all items increase. The food index increased 0.4 percent in March, with several major grocery store food groups increasing notably”
In early 2013 I predicted that rising home prices and rents will contribute to higher US CPI. So the US housing bubble is adding to CPI strains.
Finally rising food prices has not just been a US or Philippine phenomenon but a also global one. Again the mainstream blames this on the supply side particularly to weather and to deteriorating events in Ukraine
While this is not to deny that supply have contributed to rising prices, what has been a standard operation procedure for the mainstream has been to deliberately omit or obscure the demand side—which seems to operate in a vacuum—particularly demand that has been influenced by central bank policies
For instance, as one would note from the FAO chart, dairy prices have been rising prior to the polar vortex or to the escalation of the Ukraine conflict.
The bottom line is that central bank inflationism has been increasingly spilling over to the real economy via rising food prices. And this is being aggravated by supply chain disruptions. This also means incidences of global hunger and poverty will rise. Such also implies of growing risks of a global food crisis.
And importantly this signals why the era of asset inflation boom is bound to reverse soon as sustained pressures on consumer prices will eventually reflect on interest rates (whether in the US, Philippines or elsewhere).
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