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Producer Price Index: Wholesale inflation spikes on stagflation

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This morning's Producer Price Index (PPI) numbers suggest that the stagflation is in full force. PPI was expected to rise 0.3% for January, and it came in way above at 0.8%. This result, which was much bigger than expected, was due to a 3.7% surge in energy prices with gasoline prices jumping by 15% -- the biggest gain in 14 months. Core PPI -- excluding gasoline and food -- was forecast to creep up 0.1% and it came in at +0.4% in January.

I was expecting PPI to rise but core PPI to drop. Unfortunately, it turns out that many companies were raising prices even as sales slumped. Auto, computer and pharmaceutical makers were among the industries boosting prices in January even as sales fell. Why did they do this? It could be because they needed to make up the revenue that they knew they would lose due to declining unit sales by raising prices on people who had to buy their products.

This is the very essence of Stagflation which pairs slow or declining economic growth with rising prices. There is really nothing more miserable for an economic actor than stagflation, and it makes very little sense for it to exist. The only explanation is that the declining number of people who can afford to buy will pay more money to cover the higher costs of serving them. This is why colleges are raising tuition on those few who can afford to pay in the wake of their declining endowments.

But I'm still trying to make sense of why gasoline prices are up so much despite crumbling demand and a relatively low price of oil. I am paying $2.02 for mid-grade instead of the $1.66 I paid in December even though oil prices are at $35.Could it be that refineries are taking themselves offline for seasonal maintenance -- thus reducing supply temporarily? Or is it because the prices of Middle Eastern crude are higher than the U.S.-produced crude that is piling up in places that are deemed too expensive to ship to refineries?

All I know is that if the economy keeps shrinking and prices keep rising, something has to give. Because people without jobs are not going to be able to afford to buy goods whose prices keep going up. And that will mean that the companies that make those goods are going to have to slash their production unless they want more unsold inventory piling up.

In short, when inflation spikes on stagflation -- people find themselves in the middle of a steaming pile of misery.

Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College. His eighth book is You Can't Order Change: Lessons from Jim McNerney's Turnaround at Boeing.

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Last updated: November 26, 2009: 03:24 PM

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