Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey issued a warning about rising inflation over the weekend as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Sunday said the United States isnโt losing control.
โHyperinflation is going to change everything. Itโs happening,โ Dorsey wrote on Twitter, later continuing to say: โIt will happen in the U.S. soon, and so the world.โ
Hyperinflation is going to change everything. Itโs happening.
โ jackโก๏ธ (@jack) October 23, 2021
It will happen in the US soon, and so the world.
โ jackโก๏ธ (@jack) October 23, 2021
During an interview on Sunday with CNN, Yellen said that inflation levels would return to normal by the second half of next year. The Treasury Secretary made the remarks in context of promoting President Joe Bidenโs domestic infrastructure and social spending packages worth trillions of dollars combined, saying the two programs would be implemented over 10 years.
โI donโt think weโre about to lose control of inflation,โ Yellen said. โOn a 12-month basis, the inflation rate will remain high into next year because of whatโs already happened. But I expect improvement by the middle to end of next yearโฆ second half of next year,โ she added.
Supply chain snags have bedeviled the United States and other countries as economic reopenings have spurred a surge in demand, she continued.
โAs we make further progress on the pandemic, I expect these bottlenecks to subside. Americans will return to the labor force as conditions improve,โ she said.
However, a group that represents UPS, FedEx, and other air cargo companies issued a warning that the looming Biden vaccine mandate for federal contractors on Dec. 8 will trigger supply chain chaos. With that mandate coming in the midst of the Christmas shopping season, they argued that will further โadversely impact needed operationsโ and noted that worker shortages are already persistent.
Meanwhile, a report from the Department of Labor released earlier this month found that the U.S. consumer price inflation is running near a 30-year high. Year-over-year prices in September are up by 5.4 percent, its report found, noting price increases for food, cars, and other staple goods.