November 22, 2024

Gas Raises Consumer Prices, but Inflation Remains Tame

The Labor Department reported on Tuesday that its Consumer Price Index increased 0.5 percent in June from May. Two-thirds of the gain came from a 6.3 percent jump in gas prices, the largest since February.

Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core prices rose just 0.2 percent.

Consumer prices have been stable this year, giving the Federal Reserve room to continue efforts to stimulate the economy.

Over all, prices rose just 1.8 percent in the last 12 months. And core prices rose just 1.6 percent in that period — the smallest 12-month change in two years. Each measure was below 2 percent, the Fed’s inflation target.

Slow economic growth and high unemployment have kept wages from rising quickly. That has made it harder for retailers and other businesses to increase prices.

In June, prices for all energy products rose 3.4 percent, mostly because of the surge in gas costs. Other prices changed little.

The gas price surge was caused by a jump in global oil prices, which was influenced by the political turmoil in Egypt. Chris G. Christopher Jr., director of consumer economics at IHS Global Insight, predicted prices at the pump would fall once conditions stabilized in Egypt.

Food prices edged up 0.2 percent. New-car prices increased 0.3 percent but were up just 1.3 percent over the last year. Clothing prices rose 0.9 percent in June but were up just 0.8 percent over the last 12 months. Prices for used cars fell 0.4 percent and were down 2.3 percent over the last year.

The Federal Reserve reported on Tuesday that manufacturing production rose 0.3 percent in June from May, as factories made more business equipment, home electronics and cars. That followed a 0.2 percent gain in May. Still, the two consecutive gains barely offset declines in March and April.

Overall industrial production, which includes factories, mines and utilities, also rose 0.3 percent in June. Mining output increased 0.8 percent and utility output slid 0.1 percent.

Manufacturing is the most critical component of industrial production. The recent gains are a hopeful sign that factories could help the economy grow in the second half of the year.

The “report confirms the picture of a moderate recovery in the manufacturing sector,” Annalisa Piazza, senior economist at Newedge Strategy, wrote in a research note.

Manufacturers have struggled this year, providing little support to the economy. Their output was up just 1.8 percent in the last 12 months. And factories cut jobs in each of the last four months, shedding 24,000 since February.

Slower global growth has cut demand for American exports. Europe is still in a recession and China’s economy grew from April through June at the slowest pace in more than two decades.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/17/business/economy/gas-raises-consumer-prices-but-inflation-remains-tame.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

IHT Special: Egyptian Economy Caught in a Political Bind

Days before the vote on the new charter, Mr. Morsi postponed a request for a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund and delayed tax reforms that had been drawn up under an economic program negotiated with the I.M.F., prompting economists and opposition groups to accuse him of appeasing the public to gain the popular vote.

The government, which has been caught between recognizing the need for strict economic overhauls and simultaneously fearing a public backlash, has stalled on important measures that would give the nation its best chance of recovery. The president has delayed reforms of energy subsidies, the biggest burden on the budget, and reneged on other cost-saving plans, including a curfew on shops and restaurants that was intended to conserve energy at a time of critical gas shortages.

Now the Muslim Brotherhood’s political future rests on its ability to make an impact on the economy, but economists and politicians say political turmoil has made that nearly impossible.

“The government is on the one hand fully convinced they should have an agreement with I.M.F., but at the same time they are reluctant to take any steps that were agreed because of the voting that took place on the Constitution, and because of the impending elections of a new Parliament,” said Samir Radwan, who was appointed finance minister by President Hosni Mubarak in January 2011, when the regime faced unprecedented protests.

The Muslim Brotherhood has claimed a narrow victory in the first round of the constitutional referendum, with unofficial polls showing that 56.5 percent voted in favor of the draft. Critics say Mr. Morsi held off on any unpopular reforms to gain the popular vote. But the close vote is likely to inflame the political situation and further divide the Islamist political majority and the mainly secularist opposition.

“They couldn’t square the circle here and sudden postponements have led to confusion,” Mr. Radwan said.

Egypt struck a preliminary staff-level agreement with the I.M.F. last month that encompassed an economic plan that would change the energy subsidy and overhaul the tax system.

But in an unusual turnaround, especially after a public announcement, Mr. Morsi said the loan would be delayed, creating anger and buoying the criticism that the government makes most decisions behind closed doors, despite promises of increased transparency.

With public support sorely lacking, reforms needed to rebalance the budget will be hard to make, analysts say.

The “missed opportunity to unite the country around a clear economic vision has undermined the economy,” said Rachel Ziemba, a director at Roubini Global Economics in London.

Tax increases, which had initially been publicized by the government as progressive, in fact have fallen on many of the lower and middle classes. The reforms include taxes on essential items like water, oil and electricity, as well as on discretionary goods like cigarettes, soft drinks and alcohol.

Meanwhile, a coupon system for subsidized gas and fuel price increases were touted to start this month, but there has been no sign of any changes to the energy subsidy program.

Historically, there has been an unwillingness by Egyptian leaders to take any drastic actions. Mr. Mubarak was loath to make any changes to popular subsidies following the 1977 so-called bread riots when President Anwar Sadat tried to terminate state subsidies on basic foodstuffs. The government quickly rescinded the decision to halt the protests.

Economic advisers to Mr. Morsi concede that harsher reforms will be a hard sell but say they are discussing options that would soften the blow.

Abdallah Shehata, chairman of the economic committee in the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party and an economic adviser to the president, said the “key is to stimulate the economy” before making reforms.

“The government has to invest more in order to convince people of any type of reform. The people need to feel there is growth,” Mr. Shehatta said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/20/world/middleeast/egyptian-economy-caught-in-a-political-bind.html?partner=rss&emc=rss