Workers have the most to lose from a wage-price spiral
As prices rise, real wages are falling
THE WORLD economy keeps producing nasty inflation surprises. In January consumer prices grew by more than expected in America, Britain and the euro zone, and America’s rate of annual producer-price inflation stayed close to 10%. Making matters worse, fears that Russia would invade Ukraine sent the oil price to over $96 a barrel on February 14th, its highest since 2014. On both sides of the Atlantic financial markets have rapidly priced in more monetary tightening in 2022, as some central bankers have begun to worry in public that they face a test of their credibility.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The chicken and the peg”
Leaders February 19th 2022
Discover more
The front line of the tech war is in Asia
The two superpowers are vying for influence. China will not necessarily win
How high could the oil price go?
Geopolitical risk is rising. But so is the supply of oil
The Trumpification of American policy
No matter who wins in November, Donald Trump has redefined both parties’ agendas
How Florida should respond to Hurricane Milton
Storms like it raise uncomfortable questions about the state’s future
Britain should not hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius
Once again, the Chagossians have been denied a say
A map of a fruit fly’s brain could help us understand our own
A miracle of complexity, powered by rotting fruit