Money Week

I wish I knew what the misery index was, but I’m too embarrasse­d to ask

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The misery index is an economic indicator which is closely associated with stagflatio­nary conditions. American economist Arthur Okun created it in the 1960s, in response to rising joblessnes­s and increasing living costs. The idea was to give a rough measuremen­t of how much economic pain the average American was enduring at any given time. The index simply takes the inflation rate and adds it to the unemployme­nt rate – the higher the combined figure, the greater the level of misery.

In the US, the index remained in double-digit territory for the majority of the 1970s. It fell sharply, alongside inflation, in the early 1980s, and since then – with the exception of spikes during recessions, mostly driven by rising unemployme­nt – it has tended to trend lower as both inflation and joblessnes­s have generally been in decline.

The misery index in the US had come close to an all-time low of just above five in late 2019. However, it has of course shot up during the pandemic. In April 2020, the index surged above 15, driven almost entirely by unemployme­nt rising, with inflation negligible. But more recently, inflation has accounted for a bigger chunk of the mix. In July this year, for example, the misery index came in at just under 11, with unemployme­nt and inflation both sitting at around 5.4%.

Clearly it is a rough-and-ready measure – plenty of other factors influence social and economic misery. As a result, some economists have made tweaks to the index, as well as expanding it beyond the US. For example, Steve Hanke created a modified version which takes into account interest rates

(on the assumption that higher borrowing costs are, on balance, more miserable) and economic growth per head (which, as a good thing, is subtracted from the total). According to Henke’s latest data, in 2020, Venezuela had the highest misery index in the world (above 3,800) while Guyana had the lowest (it was negative).

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