More on Food and Energy Prices

I wrote a  post recently on why the overall inflation rate remains low and why core inflation is very low while food and energy prices are on the rise.  I know this seems baffling.  Research Economist Daniel Carroll from Fed Cleavland has some more details and analysis on this so I thought I’d take the opportunity to share it with you.  I also have a bit of rant, so be patient with me.

First, you can see the underlying volatility in recent energy prices in the nifty graph to the right.  This volatility is one of the reasons that many economists prefer the core inflation measures to something like the CPI. People adjust their driving and car buying habits when gas prices are high and the CPI doesn’t catch the corresponding buying shifts because it’s based on a fixed basket of purchased goods and services thought to represent a typical urban consumer at that time.  People will drive more when gas prices are low and they’ll cut out unnecessary trips when prices are high at the pump.  Also, commodity prices tend to have seasonality and they experience a lot of shocks that make them have higher than normal price variations.  Think weather, political unrest, and other uncontrollable black swan events.

You can also see from the graph a lesser degree of volatility in food prices coupled with the underlying, increasing trend.  The job of economists is to try to run models that look at the trend that has occurred over time and to search for corresponding explanatory variables.  The other analysis that is frequently done is finding out who is impacted by these changes.  I mentioned that food and energy inflation hurts poor people the most because it represents a big portion of their budgets and incomes.  Carroll’s analysis includes some specifics on that .

It should not come as a surprise that people are particularly concerned about increases in food and energy prices, whether the increases are large or small. Not only do energy prices pass through to other prices, but household expenditures on food and energy make up a significant fraction of total household expenditures. Data from the BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey show that on average from 1999 to 2009, energy (including motor fuel) and food at home accounted for more than 15 percent of total expenditures and 13 percent of after-tax income.

The importance of food and energy prices to households’ bottom lines is not evenly distributed across the income distribution either. For the median household, food and energy are roughly 17 percent of both expenditures and after-tax income. Households in the top 20 percent of the income distribution spend 11.6 percent of total expenditures on food and energy, which adds up to 7.9 percent of disposable income. For the bottom 20 percent these shares rise to 20.4 percent of expenditures and a whopping 44.1 percent of after-tax income!

For those astutely wondering why food and energy expenditures are a larger fraction of total expenditures than of total income for the bottom 20 percent, there is a much higher fraction of households in this quintile which may be using savings and credit markets to consume above their annual income. Likely categories are the unemployed, business owners with temporary losses, students living on loans, and retirees drawing down their nest eggs.

There are two other nifty graphs at that site that show the impact of food and energy prices on the bottom twenty percent–quintile–of all households in terms of their incomes and budgets.  It’s really disturbing to see the impact in bright red and blue.   Increased prices in key budget items force many of these people over the edge.  Because many poor people have no control over the amount of money they earn, these people are more likely to run up credit cards, decrease contributions to retirement savings, or sell off assets. They can also end up on the street and on public programs.  Increases in food and gas basically drive the poor further into the ground.

This brings me to the policy implications.  First, any state with a huge proportion of poor or elderly that derives income from sales taxes on these items is basically creating and perpetuating its own underclass.  It is much more likely they will see increases in populations needing state assistance under these circumstances.  This situation gets worse as it continues.  Second, attempts to remove subsidies for the poor and elderly for their home heating and air conditioning costs will do the same thing or worse.  It’s really difficult for me to understand why we subsidize large banks using bad lending practices to stop them from bankruptcy but some policy makers tout cuts in programs helping the poor pay outrageous gas and light bills or providing increased subsidies to programs like WIC. Republicans–you know, the fetus fetishists?–want to cut WIC by 10%.

At this point, I could even justify cutting rebate checks of $300-$500 for all those households with incomes in the bottom income quintile just to help them with food and energy bills. I know this is unlikely to happen.  It would also provide a slight boost to local economies since this is the income group that is least likely to save and most likely to spend the money on basics.  I’m not a big supporter of tax rebates because they generally just go to pay down debt and have very little economic impact.  This would be different since it’s aimed solely at people who need to spend the money. It’s also aimed at helping a few people stay in their situation long enough to avoid perpetual dependency on state largess.

This brings me to one more item for you to discuss.  There were two articles recently pushing the canard that lower taxes for rich people increase revenues to governments (false) and that low taxes are ?good” for the overall economy(false too).  One was a WSJ editorial by trust fund baby Steve Forbes that once again tries to resurrect the much discredited Laffer curve and empirically challenged view of Reaganomics. You already know the antics of trust fund baby David Koch who feels persecuted because of the blowback on his war on nonbillionaires. The other baby of privilege wrecking havoc in Republican political circles is Grover Norquist. All three of these guys come from very rich parents, breezed into ivy league educations as legacies with parents who could buy them in regardless of grades and inherited enough money and gave them ready made businesses run by competent others.  Now, they can spend their useless lives undermining any policy that takes anything from their pockets and boosts their cred on the Forbes 50 list.  There are also some op ed pundits–Thomas Friedman comes to mind–with similar set ups.  Here’s how they spend their lives and their daddies’ money.

According to a report in The Hill newspaper, Americans for Tax Reform president Grover Norquist has received assurances from Republican leaders in Congress that under no circumstances will they vote for any tax increase, either as part of deficit reduction or tax reform. Apparently, the only permissable deficit reduction is spending cuts and the only permissable tax reform is tax cuts. Given that Grover has succeeded in getting all but a small handful of Republicans to sign his no-new-taxes pledge, he essentially controls tax policy by being the sole arbiter of what constitutes a violation of the pledge and what does not. And given the power of the Tea Party to upset incumbent Republicans in primaries when they are viewed as insufficiently loyal to its agenda, it would take a very confident and courageous Republican to risk being accused of violating Grover’s pledge whether he or she signed it or not, since it would guarantee primary opposition from a well financed Tea Party candidate — the Club for Growth will see to that.

What really bothers me is that some how the Krewe of Trust Funds has managed to convince many–mostly white–working class Americans that government is using their hard earned wages to subsidize permanent vacations for the underclass.  None of these leisure class propogandameisters have known a hard days work or food insecurity in their lives.  They popped out of their mother’s uterus with automatic access to food, education, multiple, very large roofs, power, and access to speechifying nonsense on some of the world’s most circulated newspapers and TV channels.  They’re absolute prime examples of the anti-meritocracy they purport to desire.  They think people don’t work because they themselves don’t work at anything. It’s pure projection.

I’m going to throw one more nifty graph at you. This time it’s from the FED in San Francisco. Notice how the World’s Industrial Production and Commodity Prices are following each other closely. Now, read this description of the stylized facts.

Commodity price swings have a direct impact on headline inflation through higher costs of energy and food, which account for 14% of overall consumer spending. However, commodity price swings—even double-digit changes—historically have had only a small effect on underlying inflation, which excludes spending on volatile energy and food components. To some extent, this reflects decisions by businesses to adjust profit margins rather than pass through higher costs to customers, particularly when demand is weak. A more important reason is that for many consumption goods, commodities and raw materials account for only a small part of the overall cost of production, particularly compared with the costs of labor, distribution, and retailing. Moreover, roughly three-fourths of consumer spending is on services such as housing and medical care that do not involve many commodities in production.Over the past 12 months, overall headline inflation as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price index has risen 1.2%, while core PCEPI has risen 0.8%. We expect recent commodity and energy price surges to raise headline inflation temporarily. We foresee relatively little pass-through to core inflation in 2011 and 2012. The slowly recuperating economy, excess capacity, and well-anchored long-term inflation expectations will keep labor costs low. In fact, with labor productivity continuing to rise, unit labor costs have actually been falling recently.

Let me point out some things here.  I bolded that last part because I want to turn it into plain English for you.  The last sentence means that no one is getting any kind of raise, even though they are working harder.  The prior sentence means to expect more of the same.  Prices on the core items will still be moderate while prices on commodities like food and oil are expected to increase.  The graph itself shows that world demand is driving a lot those price increases.  There is some increased “steepness’ in the price series which implies there are most likely other factors at play too.  Chances are the uncertainty around MENA, some bad weather, and speculation has added to food and oil prices increasing at quicker increasing rate.  I haven’t run any regressions on it so I can’t say that for certain, but it’s highly likely.

This should be a signal to policy makers to act appropriately.  Instead, policy makers are acting inappropriately.  That Bruce Bartlett quote about Grover Norquist seems to indicate they are listening to the temper tantrums and following the money of the trust fund babies.  We need economic policy that helps all people.  Instead, we’re getting Paris Hilton lifestyle maintenance programs.  We need well paying jobs in this country, not more tax cuts for billionaires. Why do these guys ‘deserve’ to keep their daddies’ hard earned cash while poor people ‘deserve’ to starve and die of exposure?

update: Mark Thoma tweeted a link to Econbrowser that has a lot more nifty graphs on the inflation in food and oil prices including ones that show the parts of the country suffering most.


12 Comments on “More on Food and Energy Prices”

  1. dm's avatar dm says:

    I don’t necessarily heed to the “rob the rich to feed the poor” motto, but what really irks me is the income tax and corporate tax code. While the corporate tax rate is “high”, most corporations have plenty of cover with various loopholes and move their more profitable divisions overseas to a country with a more favorable tax rate. Then the individual income tax…I’m all for everyone paying their fair share. Too much wiggle room for “creative accounting”.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      That’s the biggest problem. Plus, the tax brackets aren’t adjusted for inflation which causes tax bracket creep in the lower brackets.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      My other comment is that you pay for it one way or the other. It’s better–imho–to provide adequate services to folks rather than wind up housing them in jails and paying for the social costs a permanent underclass tends to create. Once you can kick people into a sustainable living, they tend to stay there unless something horrible happens.

      • paper doll's avatar paper doll says:

        imho–to provide adequate services to folks rather than wind up housing them in jails and paying for the social costs a permanent underclass tends to create.

        look I agree…but these are seen as the growth industries…plus the control thing and the super wealthy feel they won’t be paying the cost, social or other wise . ( they are seeing to that) All they see is dollars from their prison stocks ( no pun intended)

        We need economic policy that helps all people. Instead, we’re getting Paris Hilton lifestyle maintenance programs

        Exactly and well put. But the super wealthy are addicted to lifestyle maintenance programs. I don’t see them giving up the pipe amy time soon just because it would be better to do so.

        The problem is in large measure , the really rich aren’t here as much as they were. So they couldn’t care less…we are like the denizens of a broken down trailer park to these people. We are suppose to be there if they want us and disappear when they don’t. Above all : cost them no tax dollars at all. They want it all on thier playing field. If you can pay for a service, fine. If not, tough.

        When Hillary said the US was not a business , but a trust….so of course they bought off the system and sunk her…she was right and a threat to the
        lifestyle maintenance programs. Like the addict, they can’t see it would be better for even them in the long run…there is no long run to these people. There is the next hit . At some point it will stop, as all things do ….but lord knows how or when

      • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

        I think hefty inheritance taxes would kick them over to the tax haven states where they belong. They’ll still invest in US businesses if they are profitable. It’s like we’re recreating an old tyme European aristocracy over here. A lot of them don’t set up foundations any more that do good either. They set up foundations–like the Koch brothers–that do harm. How to get people convinced that inheritance taxes on the uber rich won’t negatively impact most people is the key. I don’t care so much about taxing the people who actually do something for a living and make billions but just inheriting wealth and businesses that don’t need you is like setting up the same crap Europe had for hundreds of years. It’s just a different form of decadent progenitors. They only beneficial thing is that usually with enough grandchildren and not enough effort the wealth can eventually disperse. But that’s when so many of these companies weren’t all such huge monopolies/oligopolies. These uberwealthy people make money from no bid contracts on federal projects and get all kinds of federal largess. It’s not like they don’t deserve to pay for the benefits.

      • paper doll's avatar paper doll says:

        I think hefty inheritance taxes would kick them over to the tax haven states where they belong

        I agree…but who’d pass that? We can’t get the media / political class pac dogs to leave teachers or our ovaries alone much less threaten their master’s pipe line . And indeed the mask is totally is off…why I call them the over lords, not the upper crust anymore . Noblesse oblige is OUT the window

        From Wiki

        Noblesse oblige: Whoever claims to be noble must conduct himself nobly.

        …In ethical discussion, it is sometimes used to summarize a moral economy wherein privilege must be balanced by duty towards those who lack such privilege or who cannot perform such duty.
        ..
        ha!

        I see this in the art field… notice how the big museum art shows of the past 30 years are a no show…the corporations don’t feel the need to dress up what they are anymore and so things like supporting the arts, and I mean the likes of the Met in NY , are out…far from covering themselves in sheep clothing, the over lords are in the ” At last we can be honest” celabration mode…. the fig leaves have scattered.

  2. paper doll's avatar paper doll says:

    They only beneficial thing is that usually with enough grandchildren and not enough effort the wealth can eventually disperse

    That’s what I’m banking on…when “all the king horses and all the king’s men” can’t give them their way …at some point it will happen, it always does

  3. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Hey Dak,

    Have you seen this?

    Former top economist: Economic inaction ‘shameful’

    “I frankly don’t understand why policy makers aren’t more worried about the suffering of real families,” former Council of Economic Advisors Chair Christina Romer, who left the Administration last fall, said during a discussion at Vanderbilt University in Nashville Tuesday. “I think there are tools we have tools we have that we can use, and I think it’s shameful that we’re not using them.”

    Romer had been a voice inside the Obama Administration pressing for a larger ecnomic stimulus and more aggressive government action from the early days of the Administration, and she’s continued to make that case from the outside in a New York Times column.

    But the sharpness of her criticism reflected deep concern among many Democratic economists about a political consensus that the federal government has to rein in expensive attempts to restart the economy even as rising oil prices again put a damper on growth.

    “We need to realize that there is still a lot of devastation out there,” Romer said, calling the 8.9% unemployment rate “an absolute crisis.”

    “If I have a complaint about policy these days, it’s that we’re not doing enough,” she said. “That goes all the way up to the Federal Reserve, [which] could be taking more aggressive action. It goes to the Congress and the Administration – there are fiscal policy actions they could be taking.”

    “And don’t tell me you can’t [take those actions] because of the deificit because I think there are fiscally responsible ways,” she said.

  4. Linda C's avatar Linda C says:

    I have a question from looking at a the graphs. The commodity price/world demand barely budged in the recession in 2001. However look at the curve from 2007 and now the current levels. The current levels which are higher now than in 2007 and the euro crisis (the elephant in the room) makes me ponder about the possibility of another crash coming soon. No one yet wants to face how the crisis in Japan is going affect our economy let alone the world economy. Since the graph is only for the past 11 years it is difficult to tell if it is comparable to previous recessions or crashes. Personal debt is still high and is only statistically lowered because of charge-offs. We have higher unemployment. Banks and business are still hoarding money. None of this sounds good to me.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      It’s completely possible. There are still any weak sectors. Housing has never recovered. Incomes are not on the rise. Most of the post growth in the world is over in the Asian region which is why US businesses are expanding there and doing nothing here. This recovery is not robust and it’s not happening in all regions or sectors.