While decomposing inflation into its constituent parts is empirically tricky, its essence is simple. Inflation results from too much money chasing too few goods. Milton Friedman popularized this rule of thumb. Its combination of intelligibility and explanatory power explains why itโs still widely used.
But not everyone got the memo. Politicians, bureaucrats, journalists, and Very Onlineโข academics are looking hard for other causes. Letโs consider some bad explanations for inflation.
โGreedy corporations!โ
The favorite of progressives in Congress, especially Senator Elizabeth Warren, this explanation is the worst of the lot. Corporations are always greedy. They want profits to be as large as possible. Yet inflation is rarely as high as it is now. The last time we saw the dollar depreciate this quickly was 40 years ago. You cannot explain a variable effect by a constant cause. Gravity does not cause one to trip and fall. Greed does not cause inflation.
โMarket power!โ
In economics, โmarket powerโ means the ability of firms to charge prices in excess of marginal costs. Proponents of market-power explanations for inflation point to increased concentration in several industries over the last two years.
Assume for the sake of argument that industry concentration has increased. It still doesnโt explain inflation.
First, the link between concentration and market power is weak. Sometimes concentration is driven by structural economic factorsโan efficient response to changing economic circumstances. When that happens, thereโs no corresponding market power increase.
Second, the market power argument confuses the level of prices for the growth rate of prices. Inflation refers to the latter. Even if market power allowed firms to raise prices, it would be a one-time event. Inflation would temporarily spike, then return to trend. Instead, weโve had a long period of above-trend inflation. It just doesnโt add up.
โWage-price spiral!โ
Some bad explanations never die. The wage-spiral view was a mainstay of Keynesian (pseudo-)theories of inflation from the mid- to late-20th century. It was bad then and itโs bad now.
Supposedly, rising prices cause workers to demand higher wages, which results in firms charging still higher prices to break even. Itโs a positive feedback loop. But it has two grave defects. One is conceptual. The other is factual.
Conceptually, it doesnโt make sense for wages to outrun worker productivity. Firms canโt afford to pay workers more than the value those workers add to the firmโs bottom line. If you own a sandwich shop, and you think hiring a prospective worker would add $15 per hour in revenue, whatโs the most youโd be willing to pay him to work? You will lose money if you pay him more than $15 per hour. The dollar figure of the workerโs output, what economists call the marginal revenue product of labor, is the upper bound on wages.
Factually, inflation has outpaced wage growth for months. The CPI increased 8.6 percent year-over-year, while nominal (dollar-valued) wages are only up 5 percent. That means workers have effectively taken a pay cut (i.e., after adjusting their wages for inflation). What wage-price spiral? If anything, firms are getting a deal!
โCost-push!โ
Iโll take question-begging for $400, Alex! This theory of inflation says businesses pass on (โpushโ) higher costs to consumers in the form of higher prices. But this isnโt an explanation. Itโs just repeating the thing to be explained. Why are costs going up? Youโre right back where you started.
Improving public discourse
Hopefully, these lousy explanations will soon fade out of the publicโs consciousness. We need to focus on what matters: a comparative abundance of money over goods. To be clear, this doesnโt mean inflation is 100 percent money supply-driven. Iโm sure lingering supply-chain issues from the pandemic and the ongoing war in Ukraine are part of the problem. Furthermore, we should be careful in weighing monetary vs. non-monetary factors.
My Sound Money Project colleagues have done good work (here, here, here, here, and here most recently) demonstrating money matters a lot right now. Itโs not the whole explanation, but itโs the largest part. Armed with this knowledge, and inoculated against some of the silly explanations prevalent today, we can work towards policy solutions to regain control over the dollarโs value.
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