For Main Street, March’s US Inflation Report Is Disastrous

Depending on your perspective, March's report on consumer prices in the US was no worse than expected. Core prices rose less on a monthly basis than economists predicted, and the 12-month increases on both the main gauge and the core index were consistent with expectations. It could've been worse. And when it comes to inflation in developed economies these days, that counts as a "win" in some people's books. Read more: America’s Inflation Problem Worsened In March For the most part, that i

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12 thoughts on “For Main Street, March’s US Inflation Report Is Disastrous

  1. Note also that lower- and middle-income households typically buy what they need in terms of food and housing.

    I’m European so naturally left leaning compared to Americans. And I’m left of center by most definitions in a European context. Yet when it comes to the American poor, I got to wonder sometimes. If they are so stretched, why didn’t they save any of the stymie checks they got and why do we have inflation? There’s plenty of evidence that most of the bottlenecks we’re experiencing/experienced were due to very unusual levels of demand for goods (rather than services).

    Either that was driven by otherwise employed (and earning) middle class people (or above) who simply didn’t need the checks and were able to burn them on, essentially, new toys or the lower 50% weren’t suffering from the COVID slowdown nearly as much as anticipated?

    I mean, what am I missing here?

    1. You’re missing a trip to any large American city, where, very much contrary to the nice skylines you see on Google images, you’ll observe homeless people sleeping on the sidewalk every few steps.

      America’s social safety net is not up to European standards by any stretch of the imagination. As unfortunate as this is, we have almost Third World-style poverty in this country in certain places. And I’m not (necessarily) talking about inner-city housing projects. Go to Appalachia sometime. Or take a tour through West Virginia. Millions upon millions of Americans have nothing. In some cases, they don’t have running water.

      Also, this… “there’s plenty of evidence that most of the bottlenecks we’re experiencing/experienced were due to very unusual levels of demand for goods,” isn’t really true. Certainly goods demand has been elevated, but there are only so many refrigerators a $1,400 stimulus check can buy.

      Why is inflation high (in some cases generationally so) in Europe, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the UK, South Korea and on, and on, and on. A hyper-globalized, hyper-specialized world had no problem providing enough goods to sate even the most voracious demand until the pandemic severed supply chains and upended just-in-time, which had become a religion.

      1. Also (consistent with the comment below), Americans by and large live paycheck to paycheck. This may be hard for some folks outside of the US to fathom given the whole “richest nation in the world” narrative, but for tens upon tens of millions of Americans, the reality is that the money runs out at the end of every month — as in, totally out. Gone. No more money. Nothing left anywhere and nobody to call to get more.

        So, those checks you mentioned get spent. The myth of the lazy American welfare freeloader is mostly just that: A myth.

        1. The vail that covers America’s not so greatness is mighty thin. I was fortunate to live in western europe for a few years (large cities) and the quality of doors, windows, buildings and public transit (to name a few things) is so much better. I live in Appalachia now. The natural landscape is incredible, the rural low income housing not so much – single wides perched on small landfills. And let’s not forget the 30 year lifespan of our ubiquitous malls. Like corporate execs hollowing out companies to cash in on stock options, we’ve hollowed out this country for all but the top few percent. We had it all after WWII and managed to squander it.

    2. fredm421 asks “…and why do we have inflation?” My answer is because every product and service in the market requires an energy input. Agriculture, mining, manufacturing, communications, transportation and retail all require petroleum based inputs in some form. Even oil exploration and production require energy. So when the retail price of energy goes up, the price of everything goes up in a never ending cycle that is eventually broken by a dramatic drop in petroleum prices. The dramatic drop usually coincides with the election of a right wing government that is determined to gut federal environmental, tax and worker safety laws. That election is usually the result of our oligarchs’ application of Kissinger’s famous solution to the Salvador Allende problem in the 1970s i.e. “make the economy scream”. That is why we can simultaneously be energy independent and suffering from inflationary energy prices.

  2. The safety net for folks is much weaker here than in Europe- the stymie checks were saved for awhile but most folks in the bottom half live month to month, so the checks got spent by now. There is probably a bit of a spendthrift attitude too- but that is not the real issue here for the most part.

  3. and it doesn’t help that many of the poor and destitute vote against their own economic interests…if only that could change…imagine…

    1. Seriously? The American voting system is purposely designed to make it as difficult as possible for the “poor and destitute” to even vote. Poll-taxes come in many forms. Ever try and get a vote by mail ballot delivered to ‘under the overpass at Main and Washington streets’? Good luck getting your vote by mail ballot delivered to a Democratic leaning zipcode in few years where the GOP controls the state legislature. Even little Estonia in the shadow of the Evil Empire has internet voting now. But in America voting is still on a work day (great way to suppress the vote back in the horse and buggy days) and by mail if you are lucky. Racism? You think that’s got something to do with it in ‘modern’ times? Patriarchal classism had something to do with it originally, as obviously, only white male property owners could vote back in the day.

      But, for the sake of argument, I used to often hear how the average Chinese citizen had few social programs the equivalent of American social security and corporate for-profit health care, etc. So where are the hordes of homeless sleeping on the sidewalks of China’s cities? It is probably a work in progress over there,

      https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/04/27/987618404/china-says-it-has-ended-poverty-is-that-true

      And so ends yet another comment post, this time with a link for troubleshooting the Temsika comment suppression system.

  4. I do think we need to call a little bullshit on all the extra money in the economy solely coming down to supply-chain issues and excessive fiscal stimulus (both of which are certainly contributors).

    I was speaking with a mortgage lender in Los Angeles yesterday and she explained in matter of fact terms (ie. she was not casting any judgement on the specifics of what she was telling me), that all she spends all day doing 5/1 ARM cash out refis for wealthy and upper middleclass homeowners. She told me about one woman who lived in Orange County who takes out $150,000 each year, every year (her house is valued at 2 million). When asked why, she said she would rather have the “spendy cash.” Another individual bought a house for 1.5 million 6 months ago. Last she week she got them a 200k cash out.

    These aren’t flippers. These aren’t people making material improvement on the houses. Some of these are for primary residences. I would say an even larger amount are for “vacation” homes (or more accurately, piggybacks). And these aren’t the lowly first time homebuyers, or the non-qualifying mortgage getters, naively taking creative financing they don’t understand. These are the best off in the country, taking sweet, sweet extra stimulus straight from the Fed. (Just as Bernanke had originally intended.)

    And I think it is the secret to the housing supply crisis across the country. You don’t even need to find a renter to meet the mortgage if your aren’t actually using the house to live. Buy a house in Phoenix for 600K. Pull 75K out a few months later. Set aside 25k for the mortgage. 50k “risk free” profit — what could possibly go wrong?

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