Greedflation 2: the greed never dies

First, there was the “greedflation,” then there was the hangover as companies refused to admit they had raised prices too far. That’s the story coming into view for the world’s central bankers: Nearly four years after the onset of pandemic-induced supply chain snarls, price hikes that exploded during the peak of the crisis have yet to come down to the Fed’s 2% target. With a plethora of studies demonstrating that corporate profits were excessive in the pandemic, policymakers are now worried about whether anything can slow the “greedflation” that’s run up costs of food and household goods.

I sometimes wonder if these dipshits arent taught in their faux econ classes that monopoly capital with its dominance over every stage of production can absolutely raise their prices on critical goods as much as they want and had to experience first-hand that they actually do hold society by the balls and can get away with literal murder.

Thomas Barkin, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, is concerned that, after decades in which makers of consumer staples were afraid to raise prices, those companies now have the upper hand, he told the Financial Times.

Got society by the balls but are afraid to squeeze?

“Big box retailers are pushing back on manufacturers to try to encourage them to begin to do more discounting. But their bargaining power is less than pre-Covid,” Barkin told the venerable “pink pages” of London, adding, “It’s going to take a while for them to negotiate price increases out of the system.”

Go figure. The middlemen are getting squeezed and want to continue making their profits by trying to cut costs instead of raising prices since they don't actually have as much leverege as commodity producers do.

Cost savings aren’t trickling down to shoppers

But piss is.

The proof is there in another inflation index, the Producer Price Index, or wholesale inflation, which has been falling below the retail pricing shown in the Consumer Price Index — meaning that cost savings aren’t being passed on to consumers.

Blah blah blah "cost of production" bullshit they still inflate that anyways without "greedflation"

The pandemic has made companies more willing to experiment with price increases, researchers at the Pricing Lab at Harvard Business School told the New York Times. Pre-pandemic, it was standard for companies to increase prices once a year, but now multiple price changes in one year are common, the outlet reported, noting that profit-hunting executives “are effectively running tests to see what prices consumers will bear before they stop buying.” A December survey from the Richmond Fed and Duke University found that 60% of company leaders are planning on price increases beyond pre-pandemic norms this year.

Gee I wonder why shoplifting is on the rise. Damn shame retailer middlemen corps primarily feel the nibble of shoplifting and not the producer corps.

That matters because the rate of inflation will determine how quickly the Federal Reserve cuts its benchmark interest rate, which is currently at a 22-year high. Corporate price increases are a substantial driver of inflation—accounting for more than half of the consumer inflation in the past year, according to multiple studies.

Blah blah blah feds begging fat cats to stop feasting

If corporations continue to hike prices to maintain the outsized profit margins they’ve gotten used to, it would substantially slow inflation’s return to its 2% target. On the other hand, if corporate profit margins shrink, companies will be incentivized to cut costs in other ways, including by laying off workers, economists told the Louisville Courier-Journal. Nationwide Chief Economist Kathy Bostjancic warned about this possibility in her 2024 economic outlook, writing, “as we cheer the cooling in inflation, it means that companies are losing the strong pricing power acquired during the period of high inflation, which boosted profit margins and profits.” If companies slow their price hikes but “do not receive an offsetting rise in the volume of sales, then revenue growth will slow, squeezing margins. This in turn will lead companies to cut expenses — notably labor costs,” she wrote.

Blah blah blah capital is in its fuck around boom phase, and it's find out phase is coming up and it's gonna fucking suck for us no matter what.

There is one way to get prices lower, and it’s a punitive approach some European supermarkets are taking: Refusing to carry products that they deem too expensive. The chain Carrefour has led this retailer boycott, dropping PepsiCo products from shelves in France, Spain, Italy, Belgium, and Poland. But France is an international outlier in this respect, empowering its grocery giants to take on Big Snack Food. U.S. retailers have not taken similar steps to date.

Europeans doing nationalism but with treats. Lol. Lmao even.

  • Alaskaball [comrade/them]
    hexagon
    MA
    ·
    10 months ago

    Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right.

    Here i am stuck in the middle with you