https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/emotional-impact-of-high-us-and-uk-inflation-by-diane-coyle-2022-08
Inflation’s Emotional Scars
Aug 16, 2022DIANE COYLE
Neither headline numbers nor reasoned economic
assessments reveal the toll that surging prices take on many households. The
non-monetary cost of today's high inflation follows hard on the heels of the
very different but similarly wrenching COVID-19 pandemic, and will likely have
two profound consequences.
CAMBRIDGE – Until this year, inflation in
advanced economies like the United States and the United Kingdom had been so
low for so long that one needed to be well into middle age to remember what
living through the price surges of the late 1970s was like. It was bad. Annual
consumer price inflation in the US peaked at 13.5% in 1980, while in the UK it
hit 24.2% in 1975 and, after a dip, rose
again to 18% in 1980.
But the headline numbers do not reveal the toll
that high inflation takes. Nor does a reasoned
economic assessment of its costs, including the distortions that arise when surging prices interact with
the tax system, the erosion of households’ savings, or the effect of the resulting
uncertainty on investment and growth.
Economists point out that increases in the
inflation rate have a redistributive effect because they harm savers but
benefit borrowers by reducing their debt burden in real terms. But that is cold
comfort to people with large mortgages who now face the highest interest rates
– and hence demands on their disposable income – in recent times.
This redistributive effect makes the policy
response to inflation unavoidably political. Here, the Bank of England has
sounded tone deaf in repeatedly calling for people not to ask for
inflation-matching pay rises. UK households’ median annual disposable income is about £31,000 ($37,305) at a time when
energy bills are predicted to rise to more than £4,000 per
year from
January, up from £1,400 in October 2021, and food prices have increased by nearly 10% in the past 12 months.
The BOE’s fear of a wage-price spiral is
rational. But rational economic assessments fail to consider the emotional
consequences of high inflation. This is more readily understood in the case of
hyperinflation. Germany’s experience of it in the 1920s is widely regarded as
having contributed to social instability, and to have had an impact on economic
policymaking that continues to this day.
But even lesser inflationary episodes like that
of the 1970s leave emotional scars. I was a teenager back then, and vividly
recall my mother’s palpable anxiety about being able to afford the weekly food
bill. She had a cupboard where she stored cans or dry goods bought on special
offer, a kind of savings account for feeding the family. I have a similar cupboard
at home even today, and have also inherited her obsession with turning off
lights and keeping the thermostat down. These habits will stand my family in
good stead in 2022 and 2023, but they predate the current crisis, reflecting
the imprint of my mother’s fears.
Today’s inflation is far outside recent
experience. People long thought that prices of everyday goods such as clothing,
food, appliances, or housewares were more likely to fall than to rise – a
feeling perhaps more salient than the price increases for services such as
transport and insurance. Today, however, there are reports of increased demand
at food banks in both the US and the UK, and greater use of cash as people try to budget more
carefully. Never mind what this says about whether the economy is in recession;
few emotions are stronger than the fear and anguish a parent feels about not
being able to provide their children with food and shelter.
This non-monetary cost of surging inflation
follows hard on the heels of the very different but similarly wrenching experience
of the COVID-19 pandemic. How will an economically harsh winter affect young
people who have already spent the best part of two years cut off from their
peers by lockdowns and had their education disrupted? A deeply anxious
generation is
being molded before our eyes.
Recognizing the emotional costs of today’s
inflation leads to two conclusions. One is that the political response is more
challenging – and more important – than getting the economics right. Although
economists’ advice will certainly be important in trying to limit this
inflationary episode, we are the support act. Politicians might sensibly opt
for policies (such as budget-busting fiscal assistance to distressed
households, or intervention in price-setting) that prevailing economic
orthodoxy would rule out.
Economic efficiency is not the top priority in
a crisis. That is why cautious economy ministries should now be planning
rationing schemes for
certain energy and food items in case such measures are needed (as they were
for gasoline in the US and the UK in the mid-1970s).
The other conclusion is that this period will
likely have important social consequences. Since the end of the mid-1980s, the
West has experienced nearly four decades of globalization, underpinned by a
political philosophy that emphasized market forces while sharply distinguishing
between state and economy.
The terms of social consent for business are
changing fundamentally, owing to the 2008 global financial crisis, the
pandemic, and now the cost-of-living crisis. Most politicians appear not to
have recognized or articulated this yet. But the idea that footloose global
profits, bonuses for the high-paid, and share buybacks can continue will soon
collide with reality. The only question is what form the transition to the new
consensus will take.
Writing for PS since 2017
28 Commentaries
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Diane Coyle, Professor of Public Policy at the
University of Cambridge, is the author, most recently, of Cogs and Monsters: What Economics
Is, and What It Should Be (Princeton
University Press, 2021).
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