Economy April 26, 2026 07:58 AM

Inflation Pressure Seen as Manageable Despite Strait of Hormuz Shock

Structural labor dynamics and anchored long-term expectations limit the risk of a sustained inflation surge

By Priya Menon
Inflation Pressure Seen as Manageable Despite Strait of Hormuz Shock

A fresh supply shock from disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz has pushed short-term inflation expectations higher, but constrained wage growth and several longer-term structural forces suggest a major, persistent overshoot in consumer-price inflation is unlikely. Fiscal imbalances, fading globalization, shifting demographics and a burst of AI-related investment will shape inflation dynamics through the end of the decade.

Key Points

  • Short-term market-implied inflation is priced at 3.2% for both the U.S. and Euro Area over the next 12 months; if realized, this implies annualized consumer-price increases of about 3.9% in the U.S. and 3.5% in the Euro Area since 2020.
  • A wage-price spiral is judged unlikely due to slowing global wage growth and a narrowing jobs-workers gap, which should limit the persistence of inflation. Sectors impacted include consumer discretionary (through reduced real incomes) and labor-sensitive industries.
  • Four structural forces will shape inflation through the rest of the decade: fiscal balances, a weakening disinflationary effect from globalization, shifting demographics, and elevated AI and IT investment that is currently inflationary.

Global inflation faces a renewed test following a shipping disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, but underlying labor-market conditions and anchored long-term expectations should keep the shock from becoming entrenched, according to a recent BCA Research analysis.

Market-implied CPI swaps show investors are pricing in 12-month inflation of 3.2% for both the United States and the Euro Area. If those expectations come to pass, cumulative consumer-price moves since 2020 would equate to roughly 3.9% annualized inflation in the U.S. and 3.5% in the Euro Area, a pace that overshoots most major central banks' targets outside of Japan.

Tariff policy in the U.S. is already exerting upward pressure on goods prices. BCA Research's data indicate that tariffs have lifted core goods PCE inflation by about three percentage points relative to where it would otherwise be. This tariff-driven component is one reason why short-term, market-based inflation expectations have moved up, even as longer-term expectations remain relatively stable.

The most worrying scenario for central bankers - a wage-price spiral that would embed inflation into the economy - appears unlikely at present. Global wage growth has slowed as labor markets have shifted back toward balance. Measures of labor slack show the jobs-workers gap has narrowed considerably from its post-2019 peaks. "The risk of a major overshoot in inflation over the next few years is quite low," the report said.

Absent a renewed pickup in wage growth, higher consumer prices will mainly reduce real incomes. That erosion of purchasing power will tend to curtail discretionary spending and weaken aggregate demand. In that sense, some inflationary impulses contain their own corrective mechanism: rising prices cut into households' ability to consume, which then eases price pressure.


Looking beyond the immediate shock, BCA Research highlights four structural forces likely to influence the inflation path through the end of the decade:

  • Fiscal policy - Government debt burdens have climbed, and gross public debt now exceeds GDP in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Japan. High debt presents a two-sided risk. On one hand, larger primary deficits or eventual monetization of debt could stoke inflation. On the other hand, public intolerance for inflation - cited as the most important issue by 34% of U.S. respondents in YouGov polling - constrains policymakers. If that aversion persists, governments may respond to high debt with fiscal consolidation, which could exert deflationary pressure.
  • Globalization - The disinflationary impact of deeper trade integration has weakened. Data cited in the analysis show that China's incorporation into global supply chains pushed U.S. consumer durable goods prices down by nearly 40% between 1995 and 2020, but recent trade frictions, pandemic-related supply disruptions and the current oil-related shock have reversed that trend.
  • Demographics - Population dynamics point to a U-shaped inflation profile. Slower population growth initially reduces investment demand through the accelerator effect, damping inflationary pressures. Over time, however, aging populations lower the ratio of workers to consumers and can create upward pressure on prices. Economic support ratios have already begun falling globally, with the effect most pronounced in Japan.
  • AI investment - Technology spending is currently acting as an inflationary force. U.S. outlays on IT hardware and software as a share of GDP have exceeded their 2000 peak. Very large capital expenditures by hyperscalers are part of this trend: projections cited in the report show hyperscaler capital expenditures rising from $412 billion in 2025 to $678 billion in 2026. Over the longer run, the net effect of AI on prices will depend on how productivity gains are distributed - if they accrue mainly to higher-income households that save more, a disinflationary outcome could dominate.

The analysis concludes that more extreme inflation scenarios are unlikely to materialize given constraints on central-bank behavior imposed by public sentiment. That constraint - broad public opposition to inflationary policies - acts as a key check on the options available to monetary authorities.

In the near term, markets should watch short-dated inflation expectations and wage trends closely. Sustained acceleration in wages would be the clearest signal that inflationary forces were becoming entrenched; in the absence of that development, rising prices are more likely to translate into weaker real incomes and a dampening of demand, which would tend to check further price rises.

For business planners and investors, the interplay of fiscal choices, trade patterns, demographic shifts and technology investment will determine which sectors face price pressure and which enjoy disinflationary benefits. Consumer-sector revenues, capital-intensive technology firms, and government finances are among those most directly affected by these structural dynamics.

Risks

  • High public debt in major economies (U.S., UK, France, Italy, Japan) could lead to inflation if financed through larger deficits or monetization; alternatively, fiscal consolidation to address debt could be deflationary - affecting government finances and interest-rate-sensitive sectors.
  • Reversal of past disinflation from globalization due to trade frictions, pandemic disruptions and energy-related shocks could push up goods prices, impacting manufacturing supply chains and consumer durables.
  • Demographic shifts toward older populations may eventually raise price pressure by reducing the worker-to-consumer ratio, with pronounced effects in countries already showing declining economic support ratios such as Japan.

More from Economy

U.S. Stock Rally Confronts Crucial Week of Tech Earnings and Fed Policy Apr 26, 2026 Does a Change in Fed Leadership Predict Market Disruption? Apr 26, 2026 Rising Energy Costs from Iran Conflict Push Inflation Upward, But Central Banks Likely to Hold Back Apr 26, 2026 Fed Appears to Rebalance Toward Inflation as Labor Concerns Ease, UBS Analysis Finds Apr 26, 2026 ECB Signals Greater Caution on Near-Term Rate Moves, UBS Says Apr 26, 2026