Charting the Global Economy: Clogged Ports Keep Prices Elevated

Supply-chain jams are leading to congestion at ports around the world, keeping prices elevated.

Trucking trips originating around the busiest U.S. ports show massive increases in idle time, while the backlog of container ships anchored near Singapore was 10.5 percentage points above normal. That’s contributing to higher global food prices, as well as inflation more broadly.

In the U.S., payrolls increased in October by more than forecast, affirming the Federal Reserve’s decision this week to start tapering its bond purchases. The Czech and Polish central banks hiked rates to combat rising inflation, while the Bank of England and Norway stood pat.

Here are some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week on the latest developments in the global economy:

U.S.

The labor market got back on track last month with a larger-than-forecast and broad-based payrolls gain of 531,000. The data paint a sunnier picture of the job market than previously thought, with easing Covid-19 cases and higher wages helping employers fill near-record openings. They also help validate the Federal Reserve’s decision this week to begin scaling back its pandemic-era pace of bond-buying aimed at keeping borrowing costs ultra-low.

Fertilizer prices skyrocketed as soaring natural gas costs have forced some European production plants to halt or curtail production. The price surge is stoking fears farmers may pull back on purchases or shift more acres into crops that require less nutrients. A drop in yields could drive crop prices higher, worsening food inflation.

Trucking trips originating around the U.S.’s busiest ports are showing massive increases in idle time, another sign of the supply-chain logjams plaguing American transport hubs. So far this year, there is more than a day’s worth of idle time per truck, up from 21.5 hours in 2020 and 17 hours in 2019.