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Despite oil prices doubling, the economy didn't slow down because energy now constitutes a historically low share of consumer budgets. Instead of cutting back, confident consumers simply drew down their savings to cover the higher cost, turning the energy shock into a pure inflationary impulse rather than a demand-destroying event.
Historically, oil price spikes have often preceded recessions. However, this pattern only holds when corporate earnings growth is decelerating or negative. With current earnings accelerating, the economy is more resilient, and the market is correctly pricing a lower probability of an oil-induced recession.
The US is more vulnerable to recession from an energy shock now than in 2022. The previous shock was absorbed by a hot labor market, high consumer savings, and a $2T reverse repo facility. All three of these buffers are now gone, leaving the economy exposed.
Inflation from a supply disruption, like an oil price spike, will eventually fade. It only becomes persistent and embedded in the economy if governments try to 'help' consumers pay for higher costs with stimulus checks, which increases the broad money supply.
While initial energy price spikes boost short-term inflation expectations, a sustained shock eventually hurts economic growth. This growth concern acts as a natural ceiling on long-term inflation expectations (break-evens), as markets anticipate an economic slowdown, preventing them from rising indefinitely.
Current oil prices are stuck in a dangerous middle ground. They fuel inflation across the economy but aren't high enough to trigger the demand destruction that would force central banks into decisive action, creating a prolonged inflationary environment.
The inflationary impact from the Middle East war will persist well beyond initial gasoline price hikes. Secondary effects on airline fares, diesel fuel, transportation, and agricultural inputs will continue for months, eventually causing an acceleration in core CPI, not just the headline figure.
Investors often rush to price in the disinflationary outcome of an oil shock (demand destruction). However, the causal chain is fixed: prices rise first, hitting real spending. Only much later does this weaken the labor market enough to reduce overall inflation, a process that can take 9-12 months to play out.
Policymakers, scarred by post-COVID inflation, risk tightening monetary policy excessively in response to energy price surges. History suggests these shocks are temporary and primarily affect headline, not core, inflation. The greater danger is stifling economic growth by overreacting to a transient inflationary impulse.
In 2022, a hot labor market and high savings from stimulus buttressed the economy. Today, households are already dissaving to maintain spending amid a weakening labor market. An oil shock now adds a 1-1.5% price hike across goods, threatening to push real household consumption to zero and stall the economy.
When facing prolonged high gas prices, consumers initially absorb costs by reducing savings or using credit. However, as the shock persists, they are forced to cut back. The primary target for these cuts is discretionary spending, specifically durable goods, as households postpone large purchases due to economic uncertainty.