Shoppers unlikely to have a wide range of food products to choose from in supermarkets, due to supply chain issues, industry body warns https://t.co/lc2Niz12z0
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) September 10, 2021
Most people do not understand how absurdly complicated supply chains are in the modern world.
They’re probably going to be finding out pretty soon.
Before supply chain breakdowns and shortages swept the world in the wake the COVID pandemic, buying the bits and pieces for an assembly line was often as easy as clicking a button and waiting a few days or, at most, a few weeks for delivery.
Not anymore.
Shortages of metals, plastics, wood and even liquor bottles are now the norm.
The upshot is a world where buyers must wait for delivery of items that were once plentiful, if they can get them at all. Rash has piles of tents she can’t ship because she can’t get the right aluminum tubing for their frames, for instance, while others lack the right zippers.
Along with the shortages come hefty price increases, which has fueled fears of a wave of sustained inflation.
There’s growing tension among Federal Reserve policymakers over how to gauge the long-term impact on prices. Some Fed policymakers are more convinced than others that price pressures will recede after some of the supply chain disruptions are resolved. How this debate evolves could influence how quickly the Fed moves to reduce the pace of asset purchases launched at the start of the pandemic, and how soon it lifts the policy interest rate from its current level near zero.
Rash and other local producers were part of a wide ranging forum recently with Richmond Fed president Tom Barkin that focused on the challenges to the U.S. recovery posed by supply chain issues that are not getting resolved as fast as policymakers had hoped.
These people shut down the whole system, and they never really started it back up, because the point of this hoax was to downsize the entire Western world.
Coronavirus is the excuse for everything.
Wait until you find out how complex the supply chain is for food in this country.
That’s when things are going to get weird.