US What the Upper-Middle-Class Left Doesn’t Get About Inflation - "Krugman in his column confessed that he had “no idea” what he paid for roughly the same groceries three years earlier, although he allowed that olive oil seemed costly."

Source: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/04/inflation-democrats-biden-interest-rates/678047/
Archive: https://archive.is/4tgFr#selection-643.0-659.14

What the Upper-Middle-Class Left Doesn’t Get About Inflation​

Liberal politicians and economists don’t seem to recognize the everyday harms of rising costs.
By Michael Powell

Democratic Party analysts and left-leaning economists have had quite enough of their fellow Americans’ complaints. As a striking number of poll respondents express alarm, despair even, about the rising cost of living during Joe Biden’s presidency, experts shake their heads. Don’t people realize that jobs are plentiful, wages are rising, and inflation is in retreat?

Few have struck this chord more insistently than Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize–winning economist and liberal New York Times columnist. In a February column titled “Vibes, Vegetables and Vitriol,” he suggested that inflation is no longer worrisome and backed up his view with field research.

“Now, I go grocery shopping myself, and am occasionally startled by the total at the cash register—although that’s usually because I wasn’t factoring in the price of that bottle of scotch I picked up along with the meat and vegetables,” Krugman wrote.

The modern Democratic Party, and liberalism itself, is to a substantial extent a bastion of college-educated, upper-middle-class professionals, people for whom Biden-era inflation is unpleasant but rarely calamitous. Poor, working-class, and lower-middle-class people experience a different reality. They carry the searing memories of the Great Recession and its foreclosure crisis, when millions of American households lost their home. A large number of these Americans worked in person during the dolorous early days of the pandemic, and saw its toll up close. And since 2019, they’ve weathered 20 percent inflation and now rising interest rates—which means they’ve lost more than a fifth of their purchasing power. Tell these Americans that the economy is humming, that median wage growth has nudged ahead of the core inflation rate, and that everything’s grand, and you’re likely to see a roll of the eyes.

Krugman in his column confessed that he had “no idea” what he paid for roughly the same groceries three years earlier, although he allowed that olive oil seemed costly. He and other economists talked of a “vibecession”—an admixture of gloom and worry and misinformation that prevents Americans from seeing the rosy nature of the economy. This is a common take among prominent Democrats and left-leaning economists, all of whom speak with an eye on the upcoming presidential election. In late February, California Governor Gavin Newsom appeared on NBC’s Meet the Press and declared that Biden had conducted a “master class” in economic helmsmanship. “The economy is booming; inflation is cooling,” Newsom said, adding, “All because of Biden’s wisdom, because of his temperance.”

Around the same time, the Harvard economics professor Jason Furman, who served as chair of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, posted on social media: “If a year ago you had told someone [that inflation] would come down to 2.5% they would be surprised & delighted.” Just before Biden’s State of the Union address last month, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer predicted that “Americans will hear a clear theme: America’s economy is accelerating, inflation is decelerating.”

These commentators have been asking near as one: Where’s the problem?

Such talk of a victory lap once again appeared premature this week, with the news that the consumer price index was 3.5 percent higher in March than a year earlier, a worse reading than many economists had expected.

But even a cooling inflation rate simply means that prices are growing more slowly. Consumers—particularly those whose wages have not kept pace—still remember years of soaring price increases.

Moreover, the core inflation rate, defined by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and carefully studied by the rate setters at the Federal Reserve, excludes food and energy costs—economic indicators that affect Americans’ daily lives. As the financial analyst Barry Ritholtz long ago noted, core CPI measures “inflation ex-inflation,” meaning inflation without inflation.

“The macroeconomy looks great, and it might appear inflation has cooled,” the University of Massachusetts at Amherst economist Isabella Weber told me. “But when you disentangle the indicators that actually matter to Americans day to day, it’s not so pretty.”

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.

According to recent data from the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey, half of Americans who earn less than $35,000 a year have reported difficulty paying everyday expenses, and nearly 80 percent are “moderately” or “very” stressed by recent price increases.

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.
The extra costs keep mounting. Interest payments on new cars have risen 80 percent since the pandemic began. Credit-card interest rates are another burden. 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.

Many commentators’ eagerness to ignore inflation’s toll appears inescapably tied to Biden’s precarious reelection prospects. The president is more clear-eyed than his cheerleaders. Several months ago, he largely stopped touting the joys of “Bidenomics” and talked instead about challenging the corporations that raised prices and padded profits. During the State of the Union, Biden pledged to take on corporations that quietly shrink their products and hike prices out of greed. “Too many corporations raise prices to pad their profits, charging more and more for less and less,” Biden said that night. “That’s why we’re cracking down on corporations that engage in price-gouging.”

Mainstream economists cringe at this kind of populist rhetoric; their assumption is that the austerity that follows raising interest rates is an unfortunate but necessary medicine. Similarly, the suggestion that wealthy corporations should bear more of the pain, and the working class less of it, has come to sound radical to some economists. In late 2021, amid the rising prices and supply-chain disruptions of the pandemic, Weber, the UMass economist, proposed a once-popular and now unusual form of economic therapy: limiting what companies can charge for food and energy. “Large corporations with market power,” she wrote in The Guardian, “have used supply problems as an opportunity to increase prices and scoop windfall profits … What we need instead is a serious conversation about strategic price controls.”

Krugman and others harshly dismissed her idea—the Times columnist panned it on Twitter as “truly stupid.” He later deleted the post and apologized. The German and British governments enacted something similar to Weber’s ideas in limited form on energy prices. Weber, whose argument that corporate greed helps accelerate inflation has since been echoed by figures such as European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, has gained acclaim as an iconoclastic thinker about inflation.

“I have been ridiculed in obnoxious ways, but people sense the injustice,” Weber told me. “Many Americans worked throughout COVID; they saw friends die; they think, I did all the things I’m supposed to do, and I still can’t afford this life.”


Perhaps the economic turmoil of Biden’s term will ease in the seven months before the election, and consumer agitation will cool in tandem with inflation. Krugman offers tart counsel to Americans: “Maybe my message here sounds like Obi-Wan Kenobi in reverse: Look, don’t trust your feelings.”

The temptation for liberal economists and politicians to deny the pain experienced by many Americans, and to condescend when they might instead try to empathize, is perhaps understandable in a fraught election year. But working- and middle-class Americans might conclude that they are wiser to trust their feelings and checking accounts than to rely on liberal economists riffing as Jedi masters.
 
I got my first car during Trumps first term. I remember filling up my car for around 20 bucks. Now if I try to save and use fucking E-85 it's 3 times as much as regular gas used to be. I used to maybe spend 100 bucks a month on groceries at a relatively fancy store getting stuff like fresh trout, gourmet mushrooms, fancy cheese. Now fuckin frozen tilapia costs as much as fresh trout used to. I'm just glad I live in bumfuck nowhere so I can easily make up for groceries via hunting, fishing, and farming. Almost feel sorry for urbcucks who can't do the same.

Mushrooms specifically have ballooned in price near me for some reason to the point I've started just growing them myself. It's fun and tasty.
 
Shit like this just reminds me of that WSJ graphic from a few years back.

These people are wealthy enough they exist in a weird parallel society detached from normal people's problems. What's really weird though is them not being able to accept that they don't have any idea of how the middle class lives.

wsj graphic.jpg
 
Shit like this just reminds me of that WSJ graphic from a few years back.

These people are wealthy enough they exist in a weird parallel society detached from normal people's problems. What's really weird though is them not being able to accept that they don't have any idea of how the middle class lives.

View attachment 5922694
Ohh shit like this pisses me off so fucking much. These ivory tower pricks actually think that "most people" make hundreds of thousands a year or if they don't then they live in backwoods Louisiana where you can live well on $25,000 a year.

Another good one was how a fucking 4 person family could feel "financially stressed" making $500,000 a year. Shit like the parents giving $18,000 a year to their old university and charity a year (get fucked college after I graduate) and each kid going to a some music lessons for $1000 a month a year and payment terms on two $70,000 cars a year.

FS-500K-Student-Loan.png


Fucking insane, they were basically making shit up to get two $250,000 a year incomes to live paycheck to paycheck. Sure it happens but you have to be a fucking retard to live paycheck to paycheck at that pay.

Oh and LOL at "3 vacations per year" who the FUCK does that?
 
I recently had to buy new shoes and a jacket for work. The clothes stores at the mall were ghost towns, and everything had gone up in price by 30-50%. The Salvation Army thrift store? Absolutely packed with people.

I think that says more than any news article ever would for me.
Well, too bad people are fucking retards and don't realize the reason for their predicament is wasting away on the White House along with his retarded cabinet
 
I recently had to buy new shoes and a jacket for work. The clothes stores at the mall were ghost towns, and everything had gone up in price by 30-50%. The Salvation Army thrift store? Absolutely packed with people.

I think that says more than any news article ever would for me.
Yeah, I absolutely need some new shoes myself and I am dreading the expense involved.
 
Fucking insane, they were basically making shit up to get two $250,000 a year incomes to live paycheck to paycheck.
I wouldn't be surprised if the author asked their parents about their finances.

It's a weird aspect of a lot of wealthy people that they often really do live paycheck to paycheck due to not considering they may not be making $200k a year forever. You find them living in houses without much any furniture or just barely scraping by, in spite of all this ludicrously expensive shit they're doing all the time. Terrible money management skills that ends up making them feel like they're struggling.

Yet in spite of that, they're still able to put tons of money away every year in paying off their houses, putting money in their 401ks and so on.

Feel like a lot of it comes down to how people fetishize the poor and want to see themselves on the same level, no matter how unrealistic that is to do. Makes it easier for them to rationalize why they're struggling with poor money management in spite of making a ton.
I recently had to buy new shoes and a jacket for work. The clothes stores at the mall were ghost towns, and everything had gone up in price by 30-50%. The Salvation Army thrift store? Absolutely packed with people.

I think that says more than any news article ever would for me.
I never see many in the mall except for holidays. Not sure it's different for employees there. Had one time I went by to get some shirts and jeans and employee there came around asking a couple times what I was doing in the changing room, which was awkward since I was really just taking a moment to actually try on the clothes to see how they looked. So I think they often aren't even used to dealing with customers which feels a bit deranged.
 
Yeah, I absolutely need some new shoes myself and I am dreading the expense involved.
What kind of shoes? Safety toe stuff can be pretty reasonable if you look around.

Basic tennis shoes/sneakers are too.

What you get butt pounded on is name brand stuff. Most overseas shoes are made in the same Asian factories to basically identical quality levels.
 
What kind of shoes? Safety toe stuff can be pretty reasonable if you look around.

Basic tennis shoes/sneakers are too.

What you get butt pounded on is name brand stuff. Most overseas shoes are made in the same Asian factories to basically identical quality levels.
Just basic sneakers, but I live in Nowhere, Oregon and don't really have a lot of choice in where to shop. There's one shoe store and a Wal-Mart.
 
Paul Krugman is the biggest retard in all of economics. He is a whore for the establishment, a propagandist who will say whatever is necessary to boost his preferred rulers.

That said, inflation has slowed down (for now), but that doesn't erase 2 years of double digit price increases.

Example, and a bit of power leveling:
We started doing curbside pickup for the grocery store back in 2020 and they keep your "baskets" going back years. For a giggle we pulled up one order from late 2020 and the price jumped from around $136 to $210... an over 50% increase. That's from late 2020, after prices had already started creeping up due to the supply chain shortages, it's probably far worse compared to 2019.

Compare that with the cart I just pulled up from 6 months ago, originally $195, now $198, about a 1.5% increase. At that rate for 6 months, it would have been just around a 12% increase if prices has been raising the way they had in the last 6 months. If that cart from 2020 had the same increase, year-to-year, it'd only be about $153.

This is all anecdotal anyway, I'm probably the most well off of our friend circle, and my wage growth has been flat... negative if you count increases in mandatory expenses like healthcare. My IRL friends who work lower paying jobs are working longer hours for equal or less pay, and the job market is so flooded with labor so there is no moving on to a better job, at least not without taking a pay cut.

Feel like a lot of it comes down to how people fetishize the poor and want to see themselves on the same level, no matter how unrealistic that is to do.
Pulp's "Common People" comes to mind. Fantastic song to for karaoke night at the local college bar.

There is the cycle in a lot of blue cities of the hipster's "slumming it" for cred, and accidentally gentrifying a community, as well.
 
“I have been ridiculed in obnoxious ways, but people sense the injustice,” Weber told me. “Many Americans worked throughout COVID; they saw friends die; they think, I did all the things I’m supposed to do, and I still can’t afford this life.
I know absolutely zero people who died with COVID, let alone from it. One hospitalization, that's it.
 
Just basic sneakers, but I live in Nowhere, Oregon and don't really have a lot of choice in where to shop. There's one shoe store and a Wal-Mart.

Get your feet professionally measured at the shoe store and then look online. 99% of tennis shoes/sneakers are going to be .5 size up from your true size.

Once you know that number you're set for decades.

Buy online with a nice return policy for deals. For the LOVE OF GOD DO NOT BUY JORDANS

Paul Krugman is the biggest retard in all of economics. He is a whore for the establishment, a propagandist who will say whatever is necessary to boost his preferred rulers.

That said, inflation has slowed down (for now), but that doesn't erase 2 years of double digit price increases.

Example, and a bit of power leveling:
We started doing curbside pickup for the grocery store back in 2020 and they keep your "baskets" going back years. For a giggle we pulled up one order from late 2020 and the price jumped from around $136 to $210... an over 50% increase. That's from late 2020, after prices had already started creeping up due to the supply chain shortages, it's probably far worse compared to 2019.

Compare that with the cart I just pulled up from 6 months ago, originally $195, now $198, about a 1.5% increase. At that rate for 6 months, it would have been just around a 12% increase if prices has been raising the way they had in the last 6 months. If that cart from 2020 had the same increase, year-to-year, it'd only be about $153.

This is all anecdotal anyway, I'm probably the most well off of our friend circle, and my wage growth has been flat... negative if you count increases in mandatory expenses like healthcare. My IRL friends who work lower paying jobs are working longer hours for equal or less pay, and the job market is so flooded with labor so there is no moving on to a better job, at least not without taking a pay cut.


Pulp's "Common People" comes to mind. Fantastic song to for karaoke night at the local college bar.

There is the cycle in a lot of blue cities of the hipster's "slumming it" for cred, and accidentally gentrifying a community, as well.

Fucking hell. Speaking of price increases, car insurance is skyrocketing because YOU'RE being punished for having insurance while Miguel, Guzman, and Aquavion don't and just flee the scene of an accident.

My car insurance has been continually rising since late 2021 while my amount of tickets and at fault accidents has increased by exactly 0.

Last accident was some dumbass girl texting and hit me on the freeway. No airbags, just a new rear bumper for me.

Oh and Mortgage rates have just gotten above 7% again and will probably stay there or keep rising for a 6-12 months.
 
Oh and LOL at "3 vacations per year" who the FUCK does that?
I haven't had one since before COVID and now I don't even know what I'd want to do.
That said, I know people who have to work for a living pay more for vacations because wealthy people just stay places they already own, or in places their friends own. Poor folk gotta pay for hotels, so it costs more each day to travel than someone rich would pay.
 
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