Food, gas driving surge in global inflation
From appliance stores in the United States to food markets in Hungary and gas stations in Poland, rising consumer prices fueled by high energy costs and supply chain disruptions are putting a pinch on households and businesses worldwide.
Rising inflation is leading to price increases for food, gas and other products and pushing many people to choose between digging deeper into their pockets or tightening their belts. In developing economies, it’s especially dire.
“We’ve noticed that we’re consuming less,” Gabor Pardi, a shopper at an open-air food market in Hungary’s capital, Budapest, said after buying a sack of fresh vegetables. “We try to shop for the cheapest and most economical things, even if they don’t look as good.”
Nearly two years into the COVID-19 pandemic struck, the economic impact of the crisis is still being felt even after countries raced out of debilitating lockdowns and consumer demand rebounded.
Making things worse, a new surge of infections is leading to renewed restrictions across the world.
The reverberations are hitting central and Eastern Europe especially hard, where countries have some of the highest inflation rates in the 27-nation European Union and people are struggling to buy food or fill their fuel tanks.
A butcher at the Budapest food market, Ildiko Vardos Serfozo, said she’s seen a drop in business as customers head to multinational grocery chains that can offer discounts by buying in large wholesale quantities.
“Buyers are price sensitive and therefore often leave us behind, even if our products are high quality. Money talks,” she said. “I’m just glad my kids don’t want to continue this family business — I don’t see much future in it.”
In nearby Poland, Barbara Grotowska, a 71-year-old pensioner, said outside a discount supermarket in the capital of Warsaw that she’s been hit hardest by her garbage collection fee nearly tripling to 88 zlotys (US$21). She also lamented that cooking oil has gone up by a third, to 10 zlotys.
“That’s a real difference,” she said.
The recent pickup in inflation has caught business leaders and economists around the world by surprise.
In spring 2020, the coronavirus crushed the global economy: governments ordered lockdowns, businesses closed or slashed hours and families stayed home. Companies braced for the worst, canceling orders and putting off investments.
In an attempt to stave off economic catastrophe, wealthy countries — most notably the United States — introduced trillions of dollars of government aid, an economic mobilization on a scale unseen since World War II. Central banks also slashed interest rates in a bid to revive economic activity.
But those efforts to jump-start economies have had unintended consequences: as consumers felt more emboldened to spend the money they had received from governments or low-interest borrowing, and vaccine rollouts encouraged people to return to restaurants, bars and shops, the surge in demand tested the capacity of suppliers.
Ports and freight yards were suddenly clogged with shipments, and prices began to rise as global supply chains seized up — especially as outbreaks of COVID-19 sometimes shut factories and ports in Asia.
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