New drivers of uncertainty emerged over the last year, including interest rates moving from nearly 0% to 5%. Here are four scenarios for how inflation might evolve in the next three years and actions your organization can take to be resilient in each.
In early 2023, unemployment is at a 50-year low, and the labor market remains tight even after a year of rising interest rates. Meanwhile, the war in Ukraine may further disrupt commodity markets and US–China trade tensions threaten the stability of global trade.
So, while the drivers of inflation and the contributors to economic uncertainty have changed over the last year, the need to understand these drivers, analyze their impact and prepare for a world of high uncertainty remains critical to the success of any future-focused enterprise. The question remains:
What can business leaders do to prepare their organizations to prosper no matter what the future of inflation holds?
In continued collaboration with Deloitte’s US and global economists, we have updated our inflation scenarios—stories about the future designed to spark insight and spot opportunity and risk—and extended our hypotheses through the end of 2025 to incorporate key changes to the economic environment.
Four critical uncertainties are likely to impact the future inflation in the United States:
Four distinct scenarios emerge based on current trends and uncertainties, each with differing implications for US organizations:
Inflation reverts to the Fed target rate of 2% as supply chain disruptions settle in 2023 and consumer demand for services vs. goods normalizes to pre-pandemic levels. The Fed’s policy is effective in reducing inflation but does not lead to a recession.
Inflation slowly falls but lingers above 2% over the next few years, as supply chain disruptions ease but the labor supply remains somewhat constrained. Firms and consumers adjust, and growth continues, albeit unevenly across industries.
Inflation falls below the 2% target as a result of overly aggressive Fed monetary policy and a faster than expected resolution of supply chain disruptions coupled with diminished consumer demand as “pandemic savings” are spent, resulting in a drop in prices across goods and services.
Inflation remains high (6%) as supply shocks from geopolitical conflicts disrupt supply chains and the rapid rebound of China’s economy results in higher demand in energy markets. Entrenched inflation expectations and a wage-price spiral necessitate a strong response from the Fed.
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Each of these scenarios creates unique opportunities and challenges requiring business leaders to act responsibly:
Additionally, business leaders may consider taking the following “no-regret” moves, regardless of which scenario plays out:
While these scenarios address the data available as of April 2023, they do not exhaust all future possibilities. The interplay between evolving global conflict, the varied responses of governments around the world, the evolution of the public’s inflationary expectations, and the possibility of other, yet-unknown shocks, makes it impossible to declare with certainty the most likely inflationary outlook in 12, 18, or 24 months.
To prepare for future uncertainty, business leaders should consider asking the following questions: