Stagflationary Shock From Energy Inflation Crisis

Published by Pamela on

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Energy Inflation stemming from the ongoing conflict in Iran has had far-reaching effects on global economies, particularly in Asia.

This article delves into the persistent nature of this inflation, examining the current elevated oil prices and their implications for Asian economies facing stagflationary shocks.

As energy importers, these nations are grappling with the dual challenges of rising costs and sluggish growth.

Additionally, we explore the potential risks posed by artificial intelligence optimism and its impact on consumer spending, inflation expectations, and overall economic stability.

The interplay of these factors necessitates careful scrutiny by policymakers.

Persistent Post-War Energy Inflation

The ongoing conflict in Iran has resulted in a significant and persistent rise in energy prices, keeping Brent crude at $96 per barrel and WTI at $90.21 per barrel, far exceeding pre-war norms.

This surge in oil prices has created a stagflationary shock for Asian economies that are heavily reliant on energy imports, straining their financial stability and economic growth.

As these nations grapple with the dual challenges of stagnant growth and rising inflation, the long-term ramifications of this energy crisis are becoming increasingly concerning.

Stagflationary Pressure on Asian Importers

Persistent oil inflation is pushing Asian importers into a stagflationary shock because higher Brent and WTI prices raise transport, food, and industrial input costs at once, while households absorb the hit through weaker real incomes and smaller discretionary budgets, and this quickly feeds into broader inflation surge readings across the region, especially in India, South Korea, and Thailand, where energy dependence is high and policy space is limited
Meanwhile, the oil price gap remains severe, with Brent at $96 per barrel and WTI at $90.21 per barrel, far above pre-war levels, so import bills are draining current accounts and forcing firms to delay hiring and investment, which reinforces growth deceleration as consumers spend less and exporters face tighter margins

Indicator Pre-War Current
Brent ($/bbl) 70 96
WTI ($/bbl) 66 90.21
India CPI / GDP Moderate inflation / steady growth Higher CPI / softer demand
South Korea CPI / GDP Contained prices / resilient growth Rising CPI / weaker output
Thailand CPI / GDP Low inflation / tourism-led growth Imported inflation / slower GDP

The table shows that the oil shock is not just lifting prices; it is also compressing growth momentum, because every additional dollar of crude worsens trade balances and reduces the room for consumption-led expansion, making policy makers watch inflation expectations and stock-wealth spillovers more closely

AI Optimism and the Risk of Economic Overheating

Exuberance around artificial intelligence can create a powerful AI-fueled wealth effect as investors bid up stocks tied to chips, cloud infrastructure, and software.

As valuations rise, households with retirement accounts or brokerage exposure often feel richer, which can lift discretionary spending on travel, dining, and durable goods.

That extra demand can arrive just as supply remains constrained by expensive energy, creating a larger economic overheating risk.

The St.

Louis Fed has warned that AI optimism can raise inflation if future gains are priced in too quickly, and a tighter policy response may then be needed, as outlined in


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