What Happens to Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) When Food Inflation Surges Above 10%?
What happens when food CPI surges above 10%? Consumer sentiment impact, political consequences, and recession risk from food inflation.
How Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) Responds
Scenario Background
Food CPI measures price changes for food at home and away from home. A 10%+ YoY increase signals severe food price inflation affecting every household daily. Unlike energy prices (visible at gas stations), food prices compound across grocery trips and restaurant visits, making them highly salient in consumer sentiment and political discourse.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
US food CPI peaked at 11.4% YoY in August 2022, the highest since 1979. Historical peaks: 20% in 1973-74 (OPEC shock + commodity boom), 18% in 1978-80, 7.9% in 2008 (commodity spike), and 6.0% in 2011 (Arab Spring commodity surge). The 2021-2022 surge reflected supply chain dysfunction, labor shortages, and the Russia-Ukraine grain disruption.
What to Watch For
- •Corn, wheat, soybean futures rising above 5-year averages
- •Restaurant food-away-from-home CPI accelerating
- •Consumer sentiment mentions of grocery prices rising sharply
- •SNAP enrollment rising
- •Global food price index (FAO) rising above 140
Other Assets When Food Inflation Surges Above 10%
Other Scenarios Affecting Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)
Get scenario analysis and Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) alerts delivered to your inbox.