Base effects
In thinking about inflation, it is important to distinguish between one off increases in the price level that have a transient impact and more permanent increases in the inflation trend. As a direct consequence of the Covid-19 pandemic, inflation fell sharply last year as many parts of the economy experienced extreme stress. If economic activity continues to normalise as the year progresses, comparisons with the lows of last year become easier and inflation will rise.
However, this should not be confused with an increase in the inflation trend. Some of the increase in inflation due to the base effect may well be attributed incorrectly to a more permanent rise in inflation and this is likely to be reflected in an increase in market sensitivity. One could, for example, imagine in such a scenario an increase in equity and bond market volatility. However, this should prove short lived as inflation subsides.
Distributional impact
A separate feature of the past year is that different parts of the economy have been impacted in very different ways by the coronavirus crisis. A corollary is that there has been an unusual widening in the range of inflation rates across the underlying components that feed into the aggregate.
It is interesting to note that the decline in inflation last year was driven by a collapse in prices in some parts of the economy, as evidenced by the sudden sharp drop in the lower end of the range, rather than a decline in all measures of inflation - the upper end of the range increased marginally. This is also captured in the difference between the median and the simple unweighted average inflation measure derived from the Cleveland Fed components and shown in Chart 1.