Commodities, Inflation and Growth: Implications for Policy and Investments
Ric Deverell and Kamal Naqvi
Foreword
Inflation-Sensitive Assets
Investable Commodity Indexes and Inflation: A Brief History
Commodities, Inflation and Growth: Implications for Policy and Investments
Inflation and Real Estate Investments
Infrastructure Assets and Inflation
Equity Investments and Inflation
Inflation-Linked Markets
Understanding and Trading Inflation Swaps and Options
The Role of Models in Modern Monetary Policy
Term Structure of Interest Rates and Expected Inflation
Monetary Policy, Inflation and Commodity Prices
Inflation and Asset Prices
Inflation and Equity Returns
Inflation Hedging through Asset and Sector Rotation
Practical Models for Inflation Forecasting
Protecting Insurance Portfolios from Inflation
Inflation, Pensions and Liability-Driven Investment Solutions
Ultra-High-Net-Worth Investors and the Real Asset Value Chain
Inflation Markets: A Portfolio Manager’s Perspective
Inflation Indexation and Products in Emerging Markets
In this chapter, we discuss the link between commodity prices, inflation and real economic growth. We start with a review of the effect commodity prices have on inflation, comparing and contrasting developed and emerging markets, and analysing 2008 as a detailed case study. Next, we discuss how higher commodity prices influence monetary policy, and compare different policy approaches from three major central banks (the US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China). A section discussing the relationship between commodity prices and economic growth follows; the key mechanisms through which commodities influence the real economy are introduced, and the effect of growth imbalances between developed and emerging markets is explained. Finally, we discuss how commodity investments might be used, either to hedge higher inflation or to lower growth. A summary section concludes the chapter.
COMMODITIES AND INFLATION
The impact of commodities on inflation continues to be a hot topic among academic economists and policymakers alike.11 See, for example, Cecchetti and Moessner (2008), Fry et al (2009), Hobijn (2008) and Lipskey (2008). However, while it is
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