It's the cost of housing, healthcare, childcare, medicine, food or college
For the last two years,
the debate on the economy has centered around inflation.Verywell / Laura Porter
After reaching a 40-year
high last summer, inflation as measured by economists is now approaching normal levels.
But despite the rapid slowdown, millions still feel squeezed by a decades-long
affordability crisis.
Even before the COVID-19
pandemic, Americans struggled to afford sky-high prices for homes, child care,
college, and health care, as wages lagged far behind the
rising cost of living. Treating all this as “inflation” does more harm than
good.
In conventional economic
theory, inflation is a “demand side” problem — a polite way for economists to
say people have too much money. Too much money chasing too few goods, the
theory goes, leads to higher prices.
It’s hard to look around
this country and conclude that our main economic challenge is people
having too much money. Seventy percent of Americans
report feeling “financially stressed,” and nearly a third report
having paid a late bill in the last six months.
But there are other
drivers of high prices that rarely make it into our conversation about
inflation.
We know, for example, that homes are getting more expensive because there aren’t enough homes being built. We also know that decades of corporate consolidation in certain industries has led to less competition and higher prices. The solutions to these cost barriers are relatively obvious: build more homes and enforce antitrust laws.
But instead, for the
last year and a half, we’ve largely looked to the Federal Reserve to lead our
response to high prices. Unfortunately, the Fed wields one tool to deal with
inflation: interest rate hikes. And they work more like a sledgehammer than a scalpel.
Since May 2022, the Fed
has aggressively raised interest rates to slow the economy by making it more
expensive to borrow money. When businesses can’t borrow, the story goes,
they’re less likely to expand operations and hire people — and when families
can’t borrow, they buy less. This leads to layoffs and lower wages, ensuring
that workers have less money to spend “chasing goods.”
The Fed sees higher
unemployment, which can be catastrophic for already struggling families, as a positive sign that
these rate hikes are working.
There are at least two
major issues with the Fed’s theory. First, inflation is coming down, our economy is growing,
and unemployment is near record lows. As
it turns out, you don’t have to grind the economy to a halt and sacrifice
millions of jobs to slow down inflation.
More importantly, these
rate hikes fail to address the core drivers of rising prices today — and in
many cases make the problem worse. The Fed can’t build more homes, break up
price-gouging corporate monopolies, or lower the cost of prescription drugs. But
it can make life even more expensive.
We see this clearly
in the housing market.
Very few people are eager to buy a home at 7 percent interest, and still fewer
want to sell homes that they’re financing at 3 or 4 percent. These high
rates push more people to rent,
which drives up the cost of rent, and discourages the construction of
new homes.
To address the true
drivers of higher prices, we must bring the concept of inflation back down to
earth. Manipulating interest rates can’t make life more affordable for
struggling families — but public investment and sound regulations that rein in
corporate price-gouging can.
Congress and statehouses
must be in the driver’s seat of the affordability agenda, as only these
democratic institutions can fund long-overdue investments in child care, health
care, housing, and education. These investments are the seeds of a stronger, more
inclusive economy.
Deferring responsibility for this future to the Fed is a colossal mistake.
Bilal Baydoun is the director of policy and
research at the Groundwork Collaborative. This op-ed was distributed by
OtherWords.org.