Key facts
- A US-Iran conflict-sized oil shock would materially increase inflation but have almost no effect on national employment, according to Boston Fed research.
- The US economy's vulnerability to oil shocks has reconfigured, posing less of a challenge for monetary policy regarding employment.
- The estimated oil price shock from the US-Iran conflict is 33%, historically significant but with different economic impacts than in the mid-1970s.
- If a similar shock occurred in the mid-1970s, it would have raised the PCE Price Index by 2.2 percentage points and reduced national employment by 1.8 percentage points.
- Energy costs tied to the Middle East conflict are cited as the primary driver of inflationary pressures in the latest Beige Book.
- Employment showed little change across most Fed districts, with many describing a 'low-hire, low-fire' labor market.
New research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston indicates that the current US economy is less vulnerable to employment risks from oil shocks compared to the 1970s. An oil shock of the magnitude produced by the ongoing Iran war would significantly increase inflation but have a negligible effect on national employment. The report suggests that the US economy's structure has reconfigured, allowing it to absorb such shocks with less damage to jobs. This implies that central banks may be able to focus more on guarding against renewed price pressures rather than managing stagflation risks. The researchers estimate that the US-Iran conflict generated a 33% oil price shock. If a similar disruption had occurred in the mid-1970s, it would have boosted the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index by 2.2 percentage points and reduced national employment by 1.8 percentage points. The current economic data and anecdotes from the Beige Book confirm that energy costs are a primary driver of inflationary pressures, with spillovers into shipping, groceries, and fertilizer. However, employment has shown little change across most Federal Reserve districts, characterized by a 'low-hire, low-fire' labor market. The study also highlights regional disparities, with oil-producing states like Texas expected to see stronger employment and housing growth compared to oil-importing regions like Massachusetts. Energy producers, however, may not view the current price spike as durable, limiting their appetite for new capital investment.
