The steady weakening of the U.S. dollar against other major
world currencies could push inflation up faster than investors have
expected, providing the Federal Reserve additional justification to
raise interest rates in the months ahead.
That’s the conclusion of analysts at Bank of America Merrill
Lynch, who examined the impact of currency prices on domestic
inflation. If correct, the analysis would vindicate Fed Chair Janet
Yellen, whose repeated assertion that the forces holding back inflation
are merely “transitory” has been challenged by skeptics.
The question, however, is just how much the strengthening of
the dollar against a basket of other world currencies affected prices
of goods in the U.S. When the dollar gains strength — as it did
throughout 2015 amid mounting fears over the course of global growth —
goods from abroad become effectively cheaper, putting a drag on U.S.
inflation. But those effects aren’t felt evenly throughout the economy.
Breaking apart the various sectors that make up core personal consumption expenditures (PCE),
the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, Bank of America isolated those
goods that have a high import content and close correlation with the
dollar, including jewelry, motor parts and appliances. An index of just
those items showed a steep increase in the past several months.
The prices of goods sensitive to changes in the dollar have risen sharply of late.
Photo: Bank of America, Haver Analytics
Overall, the analysts found that lower import costs put a
0.3 percent damper on year-over-year inflation. That might not sound
like much, but 0.3 percent is a large margin relative to the Fed’s
target of 2 percent annual gains in core PCE, a metric that excludes
food and energy prices. In February, prices accelerated at a clip of
1.67 percent year over year.
The course of inflation over the rest of 2016 depends in part on the
path the dollar takes. After appreciating nearly 10 percent over the
course of 2015, the dollar has eased more than 3 percent in 2016. If
Bank of America’s current projections hold, core inflation is likely to
merely inch toward 2 percent over the next 18 months. But a 10 percent
decline in the dollar, totally erasing last year’s gains, would push
inflation back to the Fed’s target much quicker, the analysts said.
But all this depends on whether the Bank of America
analysts' thesis holds — that import prices really are appreciably
raising inflation. Inflation measures rose in the first two months of
the year, concurrent with the easing of the dollar. Though the Fed
ascribed the pop in inflation to “transitory factors,” Bank of America
argued the effect on the dollar wouldn’t be so brief.
A quickened fall in the price of the dollar could push inflation up faster than expected.
Photo: Bank of America, Haver Analytics
“The shift is broad, brisk, and suggests the dollar’s
disinflationary drag is fading,” the analysts wrote. In short, that
means the Fed may have to take a harder look at the dollar in coming
months as policymakers grapple with the decision of when to hike
interest rates next.
The Fed's rate-setting committee meets again next Tuesday and Wednesday.
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