Higher inflation brings lower standard of living
With prices up and wages flat, consumers have to make do with less
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Record inflation brings living standard to new low Aug. 14: As inflation hits a 17-year high, the word "bargain" has become a relative term. CNBC's Scott Cohn reports. Nightly News |
U.S. consumer prices shot up faster than expected in July, fueling the biggest year-over-year jump in more than 17 years, according to the latest government data. Prices were 5.6 percent higher in July than they were a year earlier. Energy prices were up 29.3 percent for the year and food costs were 6 percent higher.
Excluding volatile food and energy items, the so-called core CPI rose 0.3 percent in each of June and July, slightly above forecasts for a 0.2 percent gain in July. On a year-over-year basis, core prices rose 2.5 percent in July, slightly more than the 2.4 percent rise that was forecast.
A separate set of data showed just how hard those prices rising are hitting household budgets. After adjusting for inflation, the average weekly paycheck dropped by 0.8 percent in July from June, extending an ongoing slide in real income. That left real earnings 3.1 percent lower in July than they were a year ago.
As the rising price of energy, food and other raw materials cuts into businesses' profits, the companies that make, ship and sell the things consumers buy are beginning to pass those costs along. With households already squeezed, something has to give. But paychecks aren’t keeping up with price increases. Tax rebates helped, but they're largely spent.
That means that as the higher costs of food and energy are passed along in higher prices for services and finished goods, consumers will just have to tighten their belts another notch.
“There’s no doubt that inflation numbers are squeezing standard of living,” said John Ryding, an economist with RDQ Economics. “And that’s even more true abroad in the developed world where food becomes a much higher part of people’s consumption basket.”
The recent pullback in oil prices offers hope those price pressures may be easing. A better-than-expected crop forecast in the U.S. also has helped reverse a sharp run-up in food prices. But global food and energy prices may not have fallen far enough to put the inflation genie back in the bottle. Despite a recent drop of more than 20 percent from this summer’s peak, oil prices are still roughly double last summer’s levels. Grain prices have tumbled from record highs this summer, but they’re still more than double 2006 levels.
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“With the economy the way it is, a lot of our consumers are now thinking with their wallets,” said Larry Young, CEO of Dr. Pepper Snapple. “Right now, we're just watching the market. We’ve got our prices set. We’re always going to be competitive out there. If we see that we need to go up, we'll be able to act quickly.”
Some companies that haven't yet passed along higher costs are having trouble holding the line. Some 38 percent of small businesses surveyed by the National Federation of Independent Business said they plan to raise their prices in the coming months, according to the trade group’s latest monthly survey.
But it’s not clear just how much more of that inflation “pass through” is still in the pipeline, according to Ryding.
“That is the $64,000 question – except in these inflation days it’s the $64 million question,” he said.
Much of the uncertainty stems from the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate to fight both inflation and recession at the same time. To fight inflation, the Fed typically raises interest rates to slow the economy and cool demand. But with the financial system battered by the bursting of the housing bubble and the ensuing credit meltdown, the Fed has cut short-term rates to 2 percent help those banks rebuild their balance sheets.
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