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Auros's avatar

"If reduced labor supply is a big part of the inflation story, then shouldn't real wages be rising?"

I am surprised not to see the phrase "compositional effect" in Dr. Nakamura's reply here. I thought there was starting to be consensus in the center-to-left econ world that the apparent decline in average real wages had to do with a reversal of what we saw at the start of the pandemic, where average wages spiked because the low-paid people became unemployed, and we _don't_ include all those people as zeros when calculating the average. With low wage workers flooding back into the active labor force, _of course_ the average wage appears to decline. If you only look at the population that was employed continuously since 2019, or you look sectorally, real wages are mostly flat or slightly rising.

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Tom Warner's avatar

This is very good, especially her quite accurate and relatively concise explanation of current inflation. She's the kind of practical academic macroeconomist that financial-sector economists appreciate: someone who is trying to better document with more data how the economy behaves to various changes, rather than blathering dogma based on ridiculously simplistic models. Perhaps in academia she would be remembered for refuting "freshwater theory", but that was always more of a dogma than a theory, popular in conservative academia and politics, never gaining any traction in financial markets. Since time immemorial, when governments have boosted spending relative to taxation, working economists employed in the financial sector have modeled that as a factor boosting growth.

The point on the historic shift of demand from services to goods is a very important one. There is more to it though than just pandemic: we are also seeing the proof of a largely forgotten point from old Austrian theory, before it turned into a kooky bury-your-gold dogma: stimulus never affects the whole economy evenly; it always flows into some sectors and activities more than others. In the pandemic, stimulus flowed into sectors that were already seeing strong demand and did not much help those seeing weak demand. With cars especially, fiscal stimulus plus low rates accentuated the contrast between booming demand and constricted supply. People desiring to upgrade homes need savings to make down payments, so the combination of stimulus checks and pandemic-forced saving was powerful fuel. And surging home-prices generate more home-owner savings, and make debt seem more worthwhile.

Re: inflation expectations, I don't think we should stop paying attention. The US is a unique case, with a very large amount of cash and cash-equivalent savings that has in recent history been more responsive to asset-price inflation than to consumer-price inflation. So the old maxim that higher inflation equals higher real rates as expectations and risks to expectations rise doesn't hold well here. That doesn't mean the expectations don't matter here - it just means they matter differently. Certainly expectations that housing prices will rise does self-stimulate US housing-price inflation. What I would reject is the idea/model that inflation is normally mainly driven by private expectations with government passively automatically adjusting fiscal spending and the central bank passively accommodating increased lending. Generally around the world the fiscal authority is the 800-pound gorilla in the room and it is never passive.

That said in this current US case I don't think aggregate fiscal spending levels have been excessive. Too much of the stimulus was untargeted cash to the middle class, and that's largely to blame for price distortions in housing and automobiles, but them's politics (R and D) for you. My feelings would be different in a normal, financial-cycle recession when I think the government needs to be more cautious not to bail out uneconomic bubble activity.

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