Tuesday, June 16, 2009 A Long Way to
Inflation<http://blog.andyharless.com/2009/06/long-way-to-inflation.html>
Most of the media seem to have interpreted today’s lower-than-expected
increase in the producer price index as good news. I’m not so sure. If you
were worried that 5% inflation was just around the corner, then naturally
you will have felt relief. Personally, I was more worried about deflation,
and I still am. The inflation risk, if it exists at all, is in the distant
future, and you could even argue that deflation in the short run increases
the risk of high inflation in the long run. It’s hard for me to see how
falling prices today are good news at all. And prices – excluding food and
energy – did fall in May according to the PPI.

You might worry about energy and commodity prices feeding through to the
broader price level. I’m worried about that too, but not in the way you
might think. Undoubtedly some of that feed-through is already happening, and
it hasn’t been enough to keep core producer price growth on the positive
side of zero. I’m worried about what happens when commodity prices (1) stop
rising (which they must do eventually) and/or (2) start falling again (which
they may well do if the recent increases have been driven largely by
unsustainable forces such as stockpiling by China). If core prices are
already falling, and only energy prices are keeping the overall PPI
inflation rate positive, what happens when energy prices stop rising?

What worries me particularly is that about 70% of the costs of production go
to labor, and the forces of deflation work very slowly in the labor market.
The data that are coming out today are only the tip of the iceberg. We’re
already seeing evidence of the loss of upward inertia in compensation. Wage
growth is decelerating, and, based on all historical experience, the
deceleration is likely to continue – in this case, to continue to the point
where it becomes deflationary.

I’m not talking about what will happen in the next 6 months; I’m talking
about what will happen over the next 5 years. “Green shoots” – however green
they may be – do not presage an imminent end to deflationary wage pressure.
And they certainly don’t presage the beginning of inflationary wage
pressure. Consider everything that has to happen before the wage pressure
reverses and becomes inflationary:

   1. Output must stabilize.

   2. Output must start growing.

   3. Output must grow faster than trend productivity.

   4. Firms must slow layoffs to the normal rate.

   5. Firms must remobilize slack full-time employees (workers who are still
   on the full-time payroll but aren’t being asked to produce much, because
   businesses have been trying to reduce inventories).

   6. Firms must bring part-time employees back to full time. (This
   recession in particular has been characterized by the tendency to reduce
   hours rather than laying off employees.)

   7. Hiring (which has been falling rapidly) must stabilize.

   8. Hiring must rise to the point where it equals the normal rate of
   layoffs, to get total employment to start rising.

   9. Hiring must become rapid enough that employment starts to grow faster
   than the population.

   10. Hiring must become rapid enough that employment growth is faster than
   the sum of the population growth & labor force re-entry. In other words, net
   hiring has to be fast enough to absorb all the workers who will start
   looking for jobs again once there are more jobs around to look for.

   11. The unemployment rate must start declining.

   12. The unemployment rate must decline by 4 or more percentage points,
   which, by historical experience, will take a matter of years.

   13. Firms must start competing for labor.

   14. Firms must start raising wages.

   15. Firms must raise wages faster than trend productivity growth.


Maybe – just maybe – we have already reached step 1. Step 2 *may* be just
around the corner. There is no evidence thus far that we are approaching
step 3. As for steps 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15......that
show may come to town eventually, but...I don’t see much need to start
reserving tickets in advance.



-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah

"Expect The Unexpected"

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