One interesting characteristic of inflation versus unemployment as a driver of perceptions of economic well-being is that inflation affects all consumers. By contrast, a shift in the unemployment rate may severely affect only a few percentage points of the population, while leaving the vast majority of workers relatively unscathed.
It may be difficult for an employed worker to find a new and better job when unemployment rates are high, but at least inflation is usually not soaring when this happens. The typical correlation between high unemployment (e.g., a recession scenario) and low inflation benefits employed individuals from a buying power perspective.
For example, in 2009, during the financial crisis, we actually saw meaningful deflation, with CPI coming in at -2.1% in July of that year. A gainfully employed civil servant with a steady paycheck might have been worried at the time about his 401k or the plunging value of his home, but from the standpoint of income and expenses, he was doing okay.
Nowadays, almost everyone is losing sleep. A recent study by the American Psychological Association points out that some 83% of Americans feel inflation is a “source of stress.” The Biden administration therefore has every reason to try to redirect public resentment. “Corporate greed” is as good a target as any.
Is greedflation misinformation?
While there is some evidence the corporate greed narrative is already having its intended effect on voters, is it backed by data?
An important element of this narrative is that America’s retailers have been gouging their customers. This prompted us to take a look at the income statements of the biggest U.S. retailers over the past 3 years, when cumulative inflation approached 20%.
If stores were aggressively marking up merchandise, one would expect to see this reflected in higher gross margins.
Gross margins are a more direct potential indicator of price gouging than operating margins or overall profit margins, because they reflect the difference between sales (money collected from customers) and the cost of goods sold (wholesale costs and other costs directly connected to stocking goods).
We actually observed the opposite trend. Over the three-year period of high inflation, gross margins declined at 9 out of the 10 large retailers. On average, gross margins declined by 1.3%.