WASHINGTON — Wholesale prices slid a record 1.3 percent in April led by a 19 percent plunge in the cost of energy, further signaling the potential threat of deflation in the United States.
The Labor Department said that its producer price index, which measures inflation before it reaches the consumer, fell by the largest level on records dating to 2009 as the disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic rattled the U.S. and the global economy.
The report Wednesday comes one day after the U.S. said consumer prices declined 0.8 percent in April, the steepest month-to-month fall since the 2008 financial crisis.
The decline of prices at both the retail and wholesale levels could be an early warning signal that the seismic evaporation of demand brought on by a pandemic could ignite a destabilizing bout of deflation, something not seen in the United States since the economic collapse of the 1930s.
“The economy is on deflation watch for producers and consumers now that economic demand is falling away more quickly than anytime … since the Great Depression,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG Bank in New York. “Inflation isn’t coming back in this economy for a long, long time.”
Gregory Daco, chief economist at Oxford Economics, said that the report on wholesale prices was “stark evidence’ that the virus-related recession was having a strong deflationary effect on the economy. “The serve demand shock from the COVID-19, the collapse of oil prices and the stronger dollar will continue to exert strong deflationary pressure on prices,” Daco said.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, delivering a webcast sponsored by the Peterson Institute, said Wednesday that there was a threat of a prolonged recession and Congress and the administration needed to do more to cushion the economy. He continued to pledge further support from the Fed, which has cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low near zero.
“Deeper and longer recessions can leave behind lasting damage in the productive capacity of the economy,” Powell said.
While the decline in energy prices has accelerated, it was the third consecutive month of falling prices, illustrating how the global economy was already slowing before the arrival of the coronavirus. The outbreak only exacerbated the trend.
Food prices at the wholesale level also fell in April, dropping 0.5 percent, although that decline could be reversed in coming months given shortages that have started to appear in such areas as meat and pork products.
Over the past 12 months, wholesale prices are down 1.2 percent, a further indication that inflation pressures are remaining dormant.