By Dr. Chris Kacher
Oil just did what oil loves to do in a real crisis: moonshot then fake everyone out with a head-fake pullback. We're talking WTI ripping 60%+ in 30 days, with a 42% explosion in the last week alone, gas jumping 14% in seven days to $3.40+ nationally.
The trigger is no mystery: US-Israel strikes broadening from pure military targets to hitting Iranian oil depots, refineries, and infrastructure. Iran pumps 3.5 to 4 million barrels a day, about 4% of global supply, sixth-largest producer on the planet, roughly matching China's output. Knock that offline (or even threaten to), and the market prices in Armageddon. We opened Sunday night/Monday morning looking at $120+ oil easy… until the G7 suits stepped in fast and announced they're prepping to release up to 400 million barrels from strategic reserves. Oil gave back a chunk in the last 18 hours.
But will this oil shock actually create destructive, runaway inflation in the U.S. economy? Unlikely.
First, the World Bank laid it out cold two years ago: Over the last five decades, oil price shocks drove over 38% of global inflation variation, way ahead of demand shocks (28%) or anything else. A 10% oil spike historically adds ~0.35% to global inflation in a year, 0.55% over three. We've seen way more than 10% recently, so on paper that screams higher inflation ahead.
But zoom in on the U.S. and the picture changes fast. The Fed itself has said the link between oil and consumer inflation (CPI) is surprisingly weak—correlation of just 0.27—while producer prices (PPI) show a much tighter 0.71 link. Why the disconnect? Oil matters a ton as an input for making stuff, but U.S. consumers spend way more on services (which barely touch oil) than goods. Energy is only 4–5% of the CPI basket. Housing? Up to 35%. And Truflation data already shows U.S. housing in outright deflation (~1.5% down over the last 12 months). That's a massive anchor pulling the other way.
Then there's the bigger structural shift the doomers keep ignoring: Higher oil is like a tax on households, but that tax has shrunk dramatically. U.S. gasoline consumption fell 4% from 2007 to 2025 while real GDP grew 42%. Energy's share of household spending dropped from 5.7% to 3.7%. Shale turned us into a net petroleum exporter and a big natural gas seller, meaning higher prices hurt consumers but boost producers, jobs, tax revenue, and the trade balance. It's not the 1970s anymore.
Layer on the deflationary freight train already rolling: tariffs (which suppress import prices long-term), mass deportations (tightening labor in low-wage sectors), AI/robotics slashing costs across manufacturing and services. These forces are structural beasts that are permanent headwinds to CPI and outweigh an oil shock. No 1970s-style melt-up unless this drags into a true multi-year mess, which incentives say it won't.
Indeed, every player in this Iran mess has skin in the game to end it fast. Trump wants a quick "victory" photo op. Iran wants the bombs to stop. China needs steady oil imports for its factories. Europe just wants the nightmare to end so stability returns. Short war = short oil spike. Short spike = no persistent inflation tail. No persistent inflation = the Fed stays boxed in by deflationary forces and eventually has to cut rates and print to keep the show going. This means higher stock and gold/gold miner prices.
Bottom line: the 1970s were a perfect storm of dependence, inefficiency, and policy blunders. Today's buffers, diversification, and quick-resolution pressures make a crippling repeat unlikely. The U.S. economy is far more resilient than the perma-bears screaming "stagflation apocalypse" want to admit. High inflation only happened because of record government spending which most affected non-tradeable "regulatorily captured" goods such as education, healthcare, food, and energy, all which rose at a faster pace than CPI suggested. These are the areas that make the 3% inflation rate hard to believe, but tradeable goods are falling in price fast due to the aforementioned reasons.
The doomers love the parallels because fear sells. Reality is usually more boring. That said, if war drags longer than incentives suggest, oil could stay elevated and test economic resilience. Stay tuned.