Published:
Higher Oil Prices Could Lead to Higher Overall and Core Inflation Rates: St. Louis Fed Analysis
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Although the price of petroleum has
moderated recently, a permanent increase to $150 per barrel by the end of 2008
could have a significant negative effect on the rate of real gross domestic
product (GDP), at least in the short run, based on an analysis from the
Federal Reserve Bank ofSt. Louis.
Kevin L. Kliesen, an economist with the St. Louis Fed, analyzed the price
of oil and the U.S. macroeconomy for the September/October issue of Review,
the Reserve Bank's bi-monthly journal of economic and business issues. The
publication is also available online at the St. Louis Fed's web site:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review.
Nearly all post-World War II recessions inthe United States were preceded
or accompanied by an increase in oil prices, which is why oil price shocks are
viewed with alarm by forecasters, macroeconomists, financial market players,
and public policymakers. "An oil price shock," Kliesen explained, "is
typically a large, unexpected increase in the relative price of energy that
affects the economic decisions of firms and households."
An oil price increase may lower real GDP through several channels. For
one, higher prices raise uncertainty about future oil prices and, thus, can
cause delays in business investment. Second, dramatic oil price changes
induce "resource reallocation," such as the major automakers switching
production from trucks and SUVs to smaller cars and hybrids.
Kliesen said that estimates of the short-run macroeconomic effects of
higher oil prices on real GDP growth can vary. Employing a simple forecasting
exercise based on an augmented version of a well-known economic model that
explains changes in real GDP growth based on changes in oil prices, he found
that an additional $50-per-barrel increase in the price of crude oil would cut
real GDP growth by about 0.25 percentage points in 2008, although by only 0.1
percentage points in 2009. "Statistically, real consumption expenditures
would experience similarly large but more persistent negative growth," said
Kliesen.
The model predicts that a permanent increase in crude oil prices to $150
per barrel would cause overall and core personal consumption expenditures
price index (PCEPI) inflation to rise to 4 percent in 2009.
"If correct," Kliesen concluded, "these results suggest that policymakers
may need to be more vigilant if oil prices rise to limits that were thought to
be unlikely by most analysts."
With branches inLittle Rock,Louisville andMemphis, the Federal Reserve
Bank ofSt. Louis serves the Eighth Federal Reserve District, which includes
all ofArkansas, easternMissouri, southernIndiana, southernIllinois,
westernKentucky, westernTennessee and northernMississippi. The St. Louis
Fed is one of 12 regional Reserve Banks that, along with the Board of
Governors inWashington, D.C., comprise the Federal Reserve System. As the
nation's central bank, the Federal Reserve System formulates U.S. monetary
policy, regulates state-chartered member banks and bank holding companies,
provides payment services to financial institutions and the U.S. government,
and promotes community development and financial education.
SOURCE Federal Reserve Bank ofSt. Louis
Copyright © 2008, PRNewswire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
Tags: ,FIN,OIL,SVY,MO-Federal-Reserve
_ _Is your favorite bookmark site missing?
Ask for it.