O btw, speaking of populism vs. accuracy, here’s something I emailed to somebody recently. Just occurred to me that it might be of general interest.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/04/inflation-democrats-biden-interest-rates/678047/?gift=ly-h2TZGdDJyaoFv6n-KaceUMPblwSdcafGzpGratDA&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
Here’s a bunch rudely-copied excerpts:
«The consumer price index for food rose 25 percent from 2019 to 2023. The jump in 2022 was the highest since the late 1970s. As of two years ago, Americans spent 11 percent of their disposable income on food, the highest share in three decades, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Food-price inflation falls most heavily on the poorest 20 percent of Americans, who spent nearly a third of their income on food in 2022, the latest year for which USDA data are available. By contrast, the highest-income fifth of households spent on average 8 percent. “If you are spending 25 to 30 percent of your income on food and prices have jumped 25 percent, you are in real pain,” Weber said.
Other staples of life have also grown more expensive. Gas prices have gone up by about 50 percent in the past four years. Fuel-oil prices jumped by more than half from March 2020 to March 2024. Home prices have gone up nearly 50 percent nationwide since the start of the pandemic; the ratio of home prices to income has reached an all-time high. Once-sharp increases in average rents nationwide have slowed but not reversed. The Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard reports that poor and working-class renters suffer disproportionate pain. “Among renter households with an annual income under $30,000, the median amount of money left over after paying for rent and utilities was just $310 a month,” the center found, adding that affordability is at an all-time low.
Then there’s the problem of money, which has become far more expensive to borrow. The Federal Reserve Board’s efforts to tamp down inflation by pushing up interest rates have exacted a painful toll on working- and middle-class Americans—a toll not captured by the inflation rate.
The average mortgage interest payment has increased threefold since 2021. The combination of high prices and high interest rates has shut many Americans out of homeownership altogether. High rates also hurt many people who already own homes: Interest rates on equity credit lines and loans, which many Americans use to pay for home repairs, college tuition, and larger purchases, more than doubled from January 2022 to July 2023. High interest rates punish low-income renters, too, by hampering local and state agencies from financing below-market-rate apartments.
In March 2022, before the Federal Reserve started raising rates in response to inflation, the average credit-card rate was 16.3 percent, according to Bankrate. Two years later, it sits above 20 percent.
All of this inflation-related misery has begun to catch the eye of the economics establishment. Recently, four researchers, including the International Monetary Fund economist Marijn Bolhuis and the former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, released a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper noting that consumers are remarkably attuned to what’s going on. “Consumers, unlike modern economists, consider the cost of money part of their cost of living,” the authors write. Consumer unease about costs and borrowing, they say, is greater than at any time since the late 1970s and early ’80s. The authors developed an “alternative” consumer price index that more closely tracks actual costs felt by American consumers. The researchers claim that their preferred inflation index would explain most of why consumers feel more sour than official statistics would normally predict.»
@herereadthis.blog
So very much of this rings true, and what we’ve been saying now for years.
People who talk about markets and economy seem uniformly insulated from the reality for so many Americans.
It’s been so clear – record profits do not go along with companies having problems with their supply chains – they result from their profiteering behavior. We’ve been saying we need windfall profits taxes and price controls since the pandemic began.
Jobs are up, “inflation” is down, Biden has managed that. Yay.
Now do something for the Americans being crushed by corporate greed.
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(Let’s see how this plays with the Mastodon plugin and whatever else I’ve got configured through bridg.ly….)
Yes, inflation is seen differently by lower quintiles of income, and we should be aware (and I think Biden is, actually, since he stopped saying inflation is beaten, afaik). But the Bass-Pro bourgeoisie* (who are NOT low income) have also been harping on inflation and that’s just hogwash.
The folks who are hurting: yes, we need to fix that. Eviction moratoria. Child tax credits. Student loan forgiveness. And more.
*”Bass-Pro bourgeoisie” is courtesy of Rob Taber on Twitter, iirc. “People one generation removed from the factory and three generations removed from the farm.”
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