cover image: Beyond Energy: Inflationary Effects of Metals Price Shocks in Production Networks

Beyond Energy: Inflationary Effects of Metals Price Shocks in Production Networks

22 Oct 2024

We examine the role of metals as economic inputs by using a production network model, calibrated for various countries using input-output (I-O) tables. Empirically, we employ local projections to study how metal shocks influence inflation, testing country-level heterogeneity in the sensitivity to these shocks. Our findings indicate that metals price shocks have significant and persistent effects on core and headline inflation, with particularly pronounced effects on countries that are highly exposed to metals in their production networks. This is in contrasts to oil supply shocks, which predominantly affect headline inflation. A shift of the global economy towards a higher relative metals intensity due to the energy transition could lead to commodity price shocks increasingly influencing core rather than headline inflation. This could make commodity price shocks less visible on impact but more persistent. Central banks should consider this shift when assessing inflation dynamics and risks.
oil production inflation commodities economic theory metals prices production oil global oil prices production networks supply shocks international macroeconomics metal prices supply shocks.

Authors

Jorge Miranda-Pinto, Andrea Pescatori, Martin Stuermer, Xueliang Wang

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DOI
https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400291630.001
ISBN
9798400291630
ISSN
1018-5941
Issue
215
Pages
44
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/215
StockNumber
WPIEA2024215
Volume
2024

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