WSJ What’s News - Inflation Is Easing, So Why Doesn’t It Always Feel That Way? Your Questions Answered
Episode Date: August 18, 2024Inflation may be coming down, but when will prices –from items in our grocery carts to insurance premiums– stop climbing so fast? And when will wages catch up to make the cost increases of recent ...years stop hurting so much? WSJ economics reporter Harriet Torry and WSJ chief economics commentator Greg Ip answer your questions about how economic data and Americans’ everyday experience don’t seem to match—and what can be done about it. Luke Vargas hosts. Further Reading Why Inflation Might Not Win the Election for Trump Why the Fed Should Cut Rates Now—Not Wait Until September This Doesn’t Look Like Recession. Here’s How One Could Happen. Economic Growth Quickens, Rising at 2.8% Rate in Second Quarter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, What's News listeners, it's Sunday, August 18th. I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal,
and this is What's News Sunday, the show where we tackle the big questions about the biggest stories in the news by reaching out to our
colleagues across the newsroom to help explain what's happening in our world.
And this week, inflation may be coming down, but when will prices from items in our grocery
carts to insurance stop climbing so fast?
And when will wages catch up to make the cost increases of recent years stop hurting so
much?
Those are questions on a lot of people's minds, feeling a disconnect between economic data
and economic reality.
So we're going to look at the outlook for costs and what past inflationary periods could
tell us about the road ahead.
Let's do it.
We have got a lot of costs to look at, a lot of experiences from our listeners to hear,
a lot of questions about the future to consider.
So let's get right to it, shall we?
And to do that, I'm joined by Wall Street Journal economics reporter Harriet Torry and
journal chief economics commentator, Greg Ip.
Harriet, I've given you quite the task here right out of the gate.
Could you just walk us through where we are in terms of price increases on the things
that make up a big slice of people's budgets?
Yeah, so I think the first point to make is that overall inflation has cooled a lot.
Two years ago, inflation was up more than 9% year over year.
Now we're at 3% year over year.
That's a big cooling and that's offering some relief for consumers.
And some things like, for instance, food at the moment is rising more slowly than the overall CPI.
But that doesn't really change the fact for people that prices have run up enormously since the start of the pandemic. Food prices are up
about 25% since before the pandemic, and that really causes pain for people. Prices might
not be rising as quickly as they were two years ago, but they're still going up bit
by bit.
Taking a more narrow timeline here and looking at the last few months, what about some other
things that make up a big part of people's spend?
Yeah, it's really services where we're seeing a lot of inflation at the moment. And it is
pretty typical for services inflation to be generally hotter than goods. But services
take up such a huge chunk of what people spend on every month, they're about two thirds of
spending and certain services just keep getting more expensive and it's frustrating for people.
So if you look at something like childcare, it's only really a big expense for people
with small children. So it's a small item in the CPI, but for people. So if you look at something like childcare, it's only really a big expense for people with small children.
So it's a small item in the CPI,
but for people who have to pay it, it's huge.
And when you're seeing inflation of 5% a year in childcare bills,
they take up such a huge share of people's budgets.
And we've also seen a lot of inflation in transportation services.
For consumers, it's extremely frustrating
when they keep hearing all these stories about how inflation is cooling,
and then they get a bill for their car insurance, and it's 20% higher than it was a year ago.
Yeah, and we do seem to have a phenomenon here, right, where some prices are traditionally very reactive. They can drop quickly in addition to going up quickly, while others are characterized by a sort of substantial lag like car insurance, something that Patrick Johnson in Downers Grove, Illinois called in to talk about.
For me, it's about insurance. Car insurance, home insurance. I just received my latest bill.
It's up 35% for my home insurance, yet no reason for those increases.
Greg, tell us more about why price increases for certain things are taking so long to filter through
to something like, for Patrick, insurance.
Well, a lot of prices respond with lags
to sort of the inputs of costs.
One of the reasons car insurance bills are going up
is that the prices of cars went up a lot
in the aftermath of the pandemic,
when there were shortages of semiconductors,
there was a scramble to buy used cars,
and you couldn't buy a car for love or money.
So naturally, if you total that more expensive car,
the insurance payout is more.
Insurers, though, need permission from state regulators
to raise premiums, and so that naturally creates a lag
between the increase in the cost of replacing a car
and when it gets passed through to insurance.
So what we saw in the data was that the cost of repairing
and maintaining a car and then ensuring it, lagged movements in the price of a car
by anywhere from 8 to 12 months. That's why even as we've seen overall
inflation come down, that is to say prices aren't moving up as much, some of
these lagged effects are still being felt such as on car insurance.
Let's get another listener in on the conversation. Now, this is Colin Stapleton
Bradley in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
I've seen in the past eight to 12 months or so that the cost for utilities for my wife
and me have gone down. The notable change for us was that because we had to move house
partially due to interest rate increases, our mortgage tripled.
Harriet, hearing that from Colin, it's a pretty stark illustration that even if people are seeing
price improvement, relatively speaking, on a lot of the things that constitute their monthly spend,
it can take just one of these lagging price increases to tip the scales back in the other
direction and make a budget feel pretty quickly unsustainable.
So what the Labor Department called Shelter makes up about a third, just over a third
of the CPI.
What people pay every month for their rent or for their mortgage payment is probably
the biggest expense that they have.
And shelter costs have been going up a lot and they continue to go up.
Greg, I'm sure people are listening to this and wondering how many more nasty surprises
could be coming. Can we look to, for instance, the inflationary period in the early 80s driven
by the oil shock in 79 or any other inflationary periods for clues as to how long we can expect
these kinds of lagging indicators to keep coursing through?
The unfortunate reality is that it's highly unlikely based on history that you will ever
have prices go back to where they were a few years ago.
You mentioned the 1970s after the Arab oil embargo,
the price of gasoline rose 50 to 100%
and it never ever went back to where it was before 1973.
People just kind of got used to that fact.
And in time, people will have gotten used
to the new normal of the level of prices
for their airline ticket, for their house,
for their car, for their cup of coffee, for their meal at McDonald's.
But provided the Fed is on the case and ensures that the rate of increase in prices returns
to what they consider normal, which is around 2% per year, people will eventually get used
to where prices are and stop feeling so burdened by inflation.
We've got to take a very short break.
But when we come back, we'll look at what can or maybe can't be done to get costs under control and the significance of voters' perceptions about
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We were just talking about how long it might take for prices to stabilize. And several people we heard from basically said that deflation is necessary here.
You mentioned Greg, that broad deflation isn't very likely,
but what about in certain areas?
I wouldn't be surprised, actually, if we see, you know, short periods of deflation in some categories.
And frankly, profit margins are now so wide for so many companies,
they have the ability to lower prices somewhat, to hold on to market share if times get tough.
So, short answer, I wouldn't expect an overall trend of deflation,
but I wouldn't be surprised to see some negative effects of prices here and there.
Honestly, you wouldn't want a persistent trend of deflation because that is normally a symptom of an
extremely sick economy and it's one for which the Federal Reserve really does not have the necessary
tools to respond. The silver lining here, such as it is, is that over time, prices and wages
tend to move together. And what we've seen in the last year is that even though wage
growth has come down, it has come down more slowly than price inflation. And so for the
last year, the average worker has been coming out ahead in terms of their purchasing power
versus inflation.
In terms of other active steps that could accelerate
the processes we're talking about here,
listener Patrick Vivian in Providence, Rhode Island
had this question for us.
With most people struggling to maintain their budget
with food, how does the government or the consumer
convince corporations to reduce their profit and lower prices for
the good of the community.
Greg, what say you to that? Can the government, can consumers speed up the return of more
moderate prices?
Well, you know, we live in a primarily market-based economy where profit-making enterprises do
not exist to essentially win applause for
doing things for the good of community, but to basically earn the highest profits for
their shareholders.
But how you earn those profits changes from time to time.
For some time now, demand has been so strong that companies really felt no need to lower
prices.
We're now seeing signs of that changing.
Companies like McDonald's, like Disney, like Delta Airlines telling us
that demand is starting to slacken
and that there's more competition
and they're having to be a lot more conscientious
about what they do with price.
Now, will the government going around
and basically wagging their finger at corporate greed,
does that make any difference?
In the long run, not a lot of difference,
but on the other hand, CEOs care about reputation
and they don't want to be thought of as greedy people.
If they know that the government is watching them,
they will indeed be more careful
about what they do with price.
Honestly, the big actor here from a policy point of view
is the Federal Reserve.
We have a central bank precisely
to deliver stable prices over time.
And effectively, their message for the last two years has been,
if we do not see inflation coming down, we will slow this economy
until prices stop going up.
The point is that people are really frustrated by inflation
and the fact that it remains high.
And there is one surefire way to bring down inflation,
especially in services, and that's a recession.
But that's probably not a situation that really anybody wants because it
means that a lot of people will lose their jobs.
Right.
Something people are certainly not going to be rooting for, well, really ever.
And especially something that would be very problematic in an election year.
And I wanted to play one final clip from a listener, Stan Samples, who lives in
Georgia, and it sounded like he might've been hearing some messages from
politicians about certain costs coming down and he just wasn't buying it.
We always love to talk about gas prices, but gas is not the only thing.
There's lots of things that we have to pay too much for.
Car insurance, cars, groceries, just the price to get somebody to fix something that your
house has gone up.
Stop talking about gas prices already. It seems like
they want us to focus on that. That's the least of our worries. Before coming to you, Greg and
Harriet, I actually asked journal editor Aaron Zittner what he made of Stan's sentiment and the
delicacy of messaging around inflation in an election year. And here's what Aaron had to say.
Inflation remains a big issue in the election. And especially when you consider that there may be 11 to 15% of voters who are undecided for them.
The economy is more important than for the partisans who have already settled on a candidate.
This is a very tough issue for the Democrats because polls have consistently shown.
It's a durable concrete finding that voters trust Donald Trump more than they do Joe Biden and now Kamala Harris on
Inflation and Kamala Harris has to find something to say about inflation that doesn't associate her too much with the unpopular
Aspects of the Biden administration Democrats have given up on trying to talk people into feeling something that they're not naturally feeling in their lives
They're not saying you should feel better about inflation.
Instead, they're saying, we hear you.
We get it.
And Kamala Harris specifically is saying, Hey, I'm the product of a middle
class family raised by a single mother.
I know what it is to have hard times.
And on the Trump side, he's playing the greatest hits.
He says inflation is terrible.
Biden has made it worse.
We had almost no inflation when I was president, which is not a fair representation of the situation. But
he's trying to amplify inflation as a problem. Democrats are trying to say, we acknowledge
inflation as a problem and we're going to do something about it.
Harriet, what do you make of that sentiment? What does it tell us about the complexity
of this issue politically?
It's kind of a two-sided coin in a way. It is very frustrating for people seeing all of these
things that are more expensive than they used to be. But the flip side of that is the reason why
we've seen a lot of inflation and higher prices is because consumer demand has been really strong,
because the labor market has been very strong, because people are prepared to go out and spend
and that has pushed up prices across the board. We are beginning to see a cooling, but it is hard for people to really kind of grasp that
the reason why they're paying more is because it's been a very strong economy and as a result,
prices for everything have gone up. I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal Chief Economics
Correspondent Greg Ip and Wall Street Journal Economics reporter Harriet Torry. Greg, Harriet,
thank you both so much.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
And that's it for What's New Sunday for August 18th.
Today's show was produced by Charlotte Gartenberg
with supervising producer Christina Rocca.
And we had help from deputy editors,
Scott Salloway and Chris Zinsley.
I'm Luke Vargas and we'll be back Monday morning
with a brand new show.
Till then, thanks for listening.