Houston Chronicle

Stakes high in battle between higher wages, rising prices

- By Jeanna Smialek

American workers are taking home bigger paychecks as employers pay up to attract and retain employees. But those same people are shelling out more for furniture, food and many other goods and services these days.

It is not yet clear which side of that equation — higher pay or higher prices — is going to win out, but the answer could matter enormously for the Federal Reserve and the White House.

There are a few ways this moment could evolve. Wage growth could remain strong, driven by a tight labor market, and overall inflation could simmer down as supply chain snarls unravel and a surge in demand for goods eases. That would benefit workers.

But troubling outcomes are also possible, and high on the list of worries is what economists call a “wage-price spiral.” Employees could begin to demand higher pay because they need to keep up with a rising cost of living, and companies may pass those labor costs on to their customers, kicking off a vicious cycle. That could make today’s quick inflation last longer than policymake­rs expect.

The stakes are high. What happens with wages will matter to families, businesses and central bankers — and the path ahead is far from certain.

“It’s the several-trillion-dollar question,” said Nick Bunker, director of research for hiring site Indeed.

For now, wage growth is rapid — just not fast enough to keep up with prices. One way to measure the dynamic is through the Employment Cost Index, which is reported by the Labor Department every quarter. In the year through September, the index’s measure of wages and salaries jumped 4.2 percent. But an inflation gauge that tracks consumer prices rose 5.4 percent over the same period.

A different measure of pay, an index that tracks hourly earnings, did rise faster than inflation in August and September after lagging it for much of the year.

And an update to that gauge Friday showed that wages climbed 0.4 percent in October, which is roughly in line with recent monthly price increases. Over the past year, that measure is up 4.9 percent. But the data on hourly earnings have been distorted by the pandemic because low-wage workers who left the job market early in 2020 are now trickling back in, jerking the average around.

The upshot is that the tug of war between price increases and pay increases has yet to decisively swing in workers’ favor.

Whether wage gains eventually eclipse inflation — and why — will be crucial for economic policymake­rs. Central bankers celebrate rising wages when they come from productivi­ty increases and strong labor markets but would worry if wages and inflation seemed to be egging each other upward.

The Federal Reserve is “watching carefully,” for a troubling increase in wages, Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday, though he noted that the central bank did not see such a trend shaping up.

Recruiters do report some early signs that inflation is factoring into pay decisions. Bill Kasko, president of Frontline Source Group, a job placement and staffing company in Dallas, said that as gas prices in particular rise, employees are demanding higher pay or work-from-home options to offset their increased commuting costs.

“It becomes a topic of discussion in negotiatio­ns for salary,” Kasko said.

But for the most part, today’s wage gains are tied to a different economic trend: red-hot demand for workers. Job openings are high, but many would-be employees remain on the labor market’s sidelines because they have chosen to retire early or because child care issues, virus concerns or other considerat­ions have dissuaded them from working.

Emily Longsworth Nixon, 27, from Dallas, is one of Kasko’s employees. She tried to recruit a woman to an executive assistant position at a technology company that would have given her a $30,000 raise — and saw the candidate walk away for a counteroff­er with no additional pay but three work-from-home days each week.

“After that, I had my tail between my legs for a couple of days; I had never thought to ask that,” she said, adding that employers need to know their candidates like never before as workers flex their power, taking home raises and other perks. “Before COVID, it was an employer-driven market.”

Those in-demand workers could end up being better off in the long run, should their pay continue to chug higher even as supply chains heal and prices for used cars and couches moderate, allowing them to afford more.

Pay gains might also become more sustainabl­e for employers as virus concerns fade and employees trickle back from the labor market’s sidelines.

And even if rapid wage increases persist, it is not absolutely the case that employers will be forced to drasticall­y raise prices. Businesses could stomach a hit to their profits instead or could invest in technology that improves worker productivi­ty.

If fewer waitresses can sell the same number of dinners because customers are ordering from QR codes, for instance, employers will have leeway to pay more without taking a hit to their bottom line.

But a happy outcome is not guaranteed. If today’s high prices do drive tomorrow’s wage negotiatio­ns and set off an upward spiral, the result could be a longer period of high inflation that prods the Fed to raise interest rates to tamp down demand and cool off prices, slowing the economy and possibly even sending it back into a recession.

A scenario like that has not taken place since the 1970s and 1980s. But a situation like the pandemic lockdowns and subsequent reopening has never happened.

“We haven’t seen a wage-price spiral for decades, but we haven’t seen inflation like this for decades, either,” said Jason Furman, a Harvard University economist and former economic adviser in the Obama administra­tion, calling the possibilit­y of a wage driven spiral “an open question.”

 ?? Jutharat Pinyodoony­achet / New York Times ?? Gas prices are seen at a station on Oct. 27 in Queens, N.Y. As gas prices rise, employees are demanding either higher pay or work-from-home options to cover increased commuting costs.
Jutharat Pinyodoony­achet / New York Times Gas prices are seen at a station on Oct. 27 in Queens, N.Y. As gas prices rise, employees are demanding either higher pay or work-from-home options to cover increased commuting costs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States