The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Did corporate greed fuel inflation? It’s not biggest culprit

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON » Furious about surging prices at the gasoline station and the supermarke­t, many consumers feel they know just where to cast blame: On greedy companies that relentless­ly jack up prices and pocket the profits.

Responding to that sentiment, the Democratic­led House of Representa­tives last month passed on a party-line vote — most Democrats for, all Republican­s against — a bill designed to crack down on alleged price gouging by energy producers.

Likewise, Britain last month announced plans to impose a temporary 25% windfall tax on oil and gas company profits and to funnel the proceeds to financiall­y struggling households.

Yet for all the public’s resentment, most economists say corporate price gouging is, at most, one of many causes of runaway inflation — and not the primary one.

“There are much more plausible candidates for what’s going on,” said Jose Azar an economist at Spain’s University of Navarra.

They include: Supply disruption­s at factories, ports and freight yards. Worker shortages. President Joe Biden’s enormous pandemic aid program. COVID 19-caused shutdowns in China. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. And, not least, a Federal Reserve that kept interest rates ultra-low longer than experts say it should have.

Most of all, though, economists say resurgent spending by consumers and government­s drove inflation up.

The blame game is, if anything, intensifyi­ng after the U.S. government reported that inflation hit 8.6% in May from a year earlier, the biggest price spike since 1981.

To fight inflation, the Fed is now belatedly tightening credit aggressive­ly. On June 15, it raised its benchmark short-term rate by three-quarters of a point — its largest hike since 1994 — and signaled that more large rate hikes are coming. The Fed hopes to achieve a notoriousl­y difficult “soft landing” — slowing growth enough to curb inflation without causing the economy to slide into recession.

For years, inflation had remained at or below the Fed’s 2% annual target, even while unemployme­nt sank to a half-century low. But when the economy rebounded from the pandemic recession with startling speed and strength, the U.S. consumer price index rose steadily — from a 2.6% year-over-year increase in March 2021 to last month’s four-decade high.

For a while at least — before profit margins at S&P 500 companies dipped early this year — the inflation surge coincided with swelling corporate earnings. It was easy for consumers to connect the dots: Companies, it seemed, were engaged in price-gouging. This wasn’t just inflation. It was greedflati­on.

Asked to name the culprits behind the spike in gasoline prices, 72% of the 1,055 Americans polled in late April and early May by the Washington Post and George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government blamed profit-seeking corporatio­ns, more than the share who pointed to Russia’s war against

Ukraine (69%) or Biden (58%) or pandemic disruption­s (58%). And the verdict was bipartisan: 86% of Democrats and 52% of Republican­s blamed corporatio­ns for inflated gas prices.

“It’s very natural for consumers to see prices rising and get angry about it and then look for someone to blame,” said Christophe­r Conlon, an economist at New York University’s Stern School of Business who studies corporate competitio­n. “You and I don’t get to set prices at the supermarke­t, the gas station or the car dealership. So people naturally blame corporatio­ns, since those are the ones they see raising prices.”

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