Economist Mohamed El-Erian has warned that a third wave of inflationary pressures is building and will be “unleashed” if the Federal Reserve doesn’t act quickly.
Economists had forecast that inflation would come in at 8.8 percent in June.
“Looking forward, inflation will come down over the next couple of months. That’s the good news,” El-Erian said on Wednesday.
However, the expert noted that a “third wave of inflationary pressures”—the underlying causes of inflation—is building, and “will be unleashed if the Fed doesn’t get its act together quickly.”
“With the first best policy option now long gone due to the first two stages of the ongoing Fed policy mistake, the recession risks are increasing accordingly,” El-Erian said.
The economist added that this means that households, particularly those in the most vulnerable segments of society, are likely to take a second “big hit,” adding that he believes “much of this could have been avoided.”
Federal Reserve officials in mid-June raised the benchmark interest rate by 0.75 percentage points, and were widely expected to raise rates by another 0.75 percentage points this month as inflation continues to soar.
‘Not Acceptable’
According to data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on July 13, the cost of rent, food, energy, and medical care all rose in June.Food prices soared 10.4 percent for the 12 months ending June, marking the largest 12-month increase since the period ending February 1981, while the energy index advanced by 41.6 percent.
Meanwhile, gasoline surged by 59.9 percent, marking the largest 12-month increase in that index since March 1980, while electricity costs jumped by 13.7 percent.
However, Biden also said the inflation figures were “outdated” because gasoline prices have declined by roughly 40 cents per gallon over the past 30 days.
The Biden administration has repeatedly downplayed fears that the U.S. economy is heading for a recession.
“For a lot of people, right now, they are in a recession because they’re just trying to survive with just buying gas and making their house payments, rent payments,” Jelinek said in an interview with CNBC.
Meanwhile, many economists have revised their recession forecasts in recent months, instead increasing the likelihood of a recession occurring in the near future.