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The great resource price shock

The great resource price shock (infographic)

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This infographic shows the impact of the rising price of food and energy over the past decade on the cost of living in the UK households. It shows the significant savings there would have been if resource prices had kept pace with other consumer prices and the risks of the 'great resource price shock' continuing.

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Page 1: The great resource price shock (infographic)

The great resourceprice shock

Page 2: The great resource price shock (infographic)

Over the past decade, world prices of key resources have risen sharply. This has meant that the cost of food and energy to UK households has gone up much more quickly than other household costs. If resource prices had just kept pace with other consumer prices, the average household could have saved over £1,000 on its food and household energy bills in 2012. As the UK becomes more and more dependent on imports, rising resource prices will hurt the economy more and the poorest will continue to be the hardest hit. If this trend continues, by 2020 household food and energy bills could have risen by another £1,675 over and above general inflation. The only reliable way to protect the UK economy against these resource price shocks in future is to improve radically the efficiency of our resource use and reuse, reducing dependency on foreign imports. And if more countries did the same, increases in global demand would be reduced, helping to keep a lid on world resource prices.

Page 3: The great resource price shock (infographic)

World resource prices have surged ahead of UK consumer prices

The great resource price shock

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

50

100

150

200

250

Food prices

UK consumer price index

Fuel prices

Commodity metals

Price level index1

Page 4: The great resource price shock (infographic)

The great resource price shock

...so prices paid by UK households for food and energy have been going up faster than the cost of other items

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 20132012

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

% Change in price level2

Energy and unprocessed food price increases

Increases in all other prices in the consumer price index

Page 5: The great resource price shock (infographic)

The UK is becoming more dependent on imports of food and energy, so world prices are hurting the economy more

2000

2012

Energy 43%

Energy -17%

Food 33%

Food 38%

Net import dependency3

The great resource price shock

Page 6: The great resource price shock (infographic)

At least half the letters written by the governor of the Bank of England to the chancellor of the exchequer since 2003, to explain overshooting inflation, may not have been necessary4

What if the great resource price shock hadn’t happened?

Page 7: The great resource price shock (infographic)

What if the great resource price shock hadn’t happened?

Wage increases may not have lagged behind inflation…

2003

£327

Using the Consumer Price Index (CPI)

Using the CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food

£335

£319

2013 2003 2013

£327

Real median weekly earnings at 2003 prices5

Page 8: The great resource price shock (infographic)

...and the cost of living should have been lower...

£619.00

AVERAGE DOMESTIC FUEL BILL

£2,532.00

£2,954.00Average cost per household in 20126

What it would have cost to buythis if food and energy prices had behaved like other prices since 20037

FOOD AND NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS

£1,206.00

DOMESTIC FUEL

What if the great resource price shock hadn’t happened?

Page 9: The great resource price shock (infographic)

...particularly for the poorest, who spend a higher proportion on food and domestic fuel

Proportion of household spending on food and domestic fuel8

Richest 20%

12% 24%

Poorest 20%

What if the great resource price shock hadn’t happened?

Page 10: The great resource price shock (infographic)

What could drive resource prices in the future?

Increasing demand for resources from growing economies, such as China and India

The rising costs of finding and extracting new resources of the right quality

Geopolitical tensions and environmental impacts affecting supplies

Today’s high prices could intensify the search for new supplies which could help to keep prices down in the future

Page 11: The great resource price shock (infographic)

What could happen if current price trends continued to 2020?9

Average annual household fuel bill

Average annual household food bill

Overall consumer prices

+£1,160

+£515

+4.2%

Page 12: The great resource price shock (infographic)

What are the options to protect the UK against this risk?

Hope for the best

Trust that new accessible and secure supplies are discovered to offset rising demand and that these supplies are not disrupted by geopolitics or environmental impacts.This leaves the UK vulnerable to shocks

Resource nationalism

Try to secure resources abroad, such as agricultural land and energy sources, for UK use. Hope that foreign governments allow these agreements to be enforced in times of crisis.This could promote conflict and is unreliable

Resource stewardship

Improve how efficiently resources are used and reused, to lower dependency on foreign imports. Encourage other countries to do the same to lower global demand and resource prices. This is the only robust solution

Page 13: The great resource price shock (infographic)

Sources

1 IMF, Commodity Price Indices; ONS, Consumer Price Index (CPI). All prices expressed as indices where 2005=100.

2 ONS, CPI data showing year-on-year change for: Energy & unprocessed food (DKD7) and CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food (DKC7)

3 Energy (net import dependency ratio): DECC, 2012, Energy trends; and DECC, 2012, UK energy in brief; Food (approximation of net import dependency ratio, using inverse of food production to supply ratio): Defra, Food statistics pocket handbook 2013

4 Fourteen letters were written between 2007 and 2012 to explain inflation breaches of more than one percentage point of the Bank of England’s target of two per cent CPI inflation. If the threshold triggering letters had been expressed in terms of ‘CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food’, only seven letters would have been sent. This only takes account of the direct effects of fuel and unprocessed food prices. If indirect effects of the prices of processed food and commodities, such as metals, minerals and plastics used in consumer goods, were removed it is likely even fewer letters would have been sent.

5 ONS, Median gross weekly earnings, all employees, table 4, Annual survey of hours and earnings. Data spliced in 2004, 2006 and 2011 to account for breaks and provide a consistent series. Divided by CPI and CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food (both rebased to 2003=100).

6 ONS, Family spending survey. Using actual weekly spending in 2012 on electricity, gas and other fuels (not transport), and food & non-alcoholic drinks, multiplied by 52.

7 Alternative spending on food and fuel calculated by rebasing 2012 spending to 2003 fuel and food prices using the electricity, gas and other fuels (D7CH) and food & non-alcoholic beverages (D7BU) sub-indices of the CPI and rebasing to 2012 in line with increases in the CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food.

8 ONS, Family spending survey. Share of weekly spending on electricity, gas and other fuels (not-transport) and food & non-alcoholic drinks, divided by total weekly spending. The poorest are the lowest income quintile (combining the lowest two deciles), whilst the richest are the highest income quintile (combining the top two deciles).

9 Food and fuel: actual spending in 2012 projected forward to 2020, assuming that prices increase in line with the average increase in the electricity, gas and other fuels (D7CH) and food & non-alcoholic beverages (D7BU) sub-indices of the CPI, between 2003-12, and the average increase in the CPI, excluding energy & unprocessed food between 2003 and 2012. The increase in costs is the difference. Overall consumer prices: additional difference calculated by projecting forward to 2020 the average annual increase between 2003 and 2012 in the CPI and the CPI, excluding energy and unprocessed food.

Page 14: The great resource price shock (infographic)

Green Alliance36 Buckingham Palace Road London, SW1W 0RE

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blog: greenallianceblog.org.uktwitter: @GreenAllianceUKThe Green Alliance Trust is a registered charity 1045395 and company limited by guarantee (England & Wales) 3037633, registered at the above address

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© Green Alliance, February 2014

Author Julian Morganchief [email protected]

AcknowledgementsThanks to Matt Blythe for help in researching the data for this publication and to Dustin Benton for his input.

The work of Green Alliance’s chief economist is supported by:

The great resourceprice shock