Going, Not Gone

Restored Balance
Core Problem
Sticky Wicket
New York, Fishing, and Not Your Father’s Convention

The ability to choose our goods and services is fundamental to economics. The freer we are to make choices, the more the economy should prosper. That’s because our choices tell producers what works.

Modern science muddies this pleasantly clear water. Behavioral economists talk about a phenomenon called “decision fatigue.” It turns out we humans would really rather avoid choices. Confronting a store shelf with 70 different kinds of toothpaste is no one’s idea of freedom. We just want toothpaste. Tell us what works. (I have been buying the same toothpaste for decades. It’s not well advertised but I tried it because it had baking soda I remembered using as a kid. Never mind the other choices.)

As the world throws more choice at us, our brains fight back with binary thinking. We want everything to be on or off, black or white, high or low. This saves mental energy but often leads us to suboptimal if not wrong choices.

Binary thinking abounds in the ongoing inflation discussion. A lot of commentary pretends we have either terrible inflation or no inflation at all. But in reality, we have degrees of inflation. It’s not a yes/no thing. Describing it requires literally a million shades of grey (forget about merely 50).

A daunting thought, I know. I apologize for imposing it on your decision-fatigued brain. But I can still simplify it for you. The inflation picture is getting better but we still have too much of it. Inflation is going but not gone, and probably won’t be gone anytime soon. Today I’ll tell you why.

Restored Balance

The latest Consumer Price Index, covering June, came out on July 11. It was a little better than expected—the 12-month CPI change was 3% while core CPI (excluding food and energy) was up 3.3%. Still significant, but far better than the 9.1% headline rate we were running two years ago.

As you can see in this chart, annual CPI is now roughly where it was in the 2005‒2006 period. But that’s still a higher rate than prevailed for most of the last 20 years.