cover image: This Is Going to Hurt: Weather Anomalies, Supply Chain Pressures and Inflation

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This Is Going to Hurt: Weather Anomalies, Supply Chain Pressures and Inflation

5 Apr 2024

As climate change accelerates, the frequency and severity of extreme weather events are expected to worsen and have greater adverse consequences for ecosystems, physical infrastructure, and economic activity across the world. This paper investigates how weather anomalies affect global supply chains and inflation dynamics. Using monthly data for six large and well-diversified economies (China, the Euro area, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom, and the United States) over the period 1997-2021, we implement a structural vector autoregressive model and document that weather anomalies could disrupt supply chains and subsequently lead to inflationary pressures. Our results—based on high-frequency data and robust to alternative estimation methodologies—show that these effects vary across countries, depending on the severity of weather shocks and vulnerability to supply chain disruptions. The impact of weather shocks on supply chains and inflation dynamics is likely to become more pronounced with accelerating climate change that can have non-linear effects. These findings have important policy implications. Central bankers should consider the impact of weather anomalies on supply chains and inflation dynamics to prevent entrenching second-round effects and de-anchoring of inflation expectations. More directly, however, governments can invest more for climate change adaptation to strengthen critical infrastructure and thereby minimize supply chain disruptions.

Authors

Serhan Cevik, Gyowon Gwon

Format
Paper
Frequency
regular
ISBN
9798400269523
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
31
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/079
StockNumber
WPIEA2024079