| > Nominal wages are a part of inflation, so there's nothing about the inflation rate that inherently changes real wages Again, no they aren't, the only link would be that inflation worsens material conditions, which could lead to more people seeking higher wages, which overall improves wage conditions. The only "link" we've seen is recently, and even looking just behind the 2020s you can find inflation causing real wage decreases [1]. > If all components of inflation increased uniformly, purchasing power would stay constant "If" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. > Inflation is only a drag to the extent that it's surprising. Tell that to people who are un-banked, working minimum wage, or really any average person and see what their response is. > However, there seems to be a relationship between inflation and unemployment. Not sure where you're seeing this, and its hard to try and claim, as we are just now reaching pre-2020 levels of unemployment, not some mythical low level of unemployment. I could see an argument for lowering unemployment leading to higher inflation, but a stable low unemployment has shown no bearing on inflation. > I further conjecture that sustained low unemployment flattens the income curve, leading to higher real wages at the low end. Thats a nice conjecture, but again, just look right before 2020 to find the perfect counter argument, and data coming out from the end of 2022 is showing the opposite[2], that as U6 has reached an all time low (which I will say is not too shabby), real wages have started to slow their growth. > low unemployment is a good thing in its own right I know I'm probably starting to seem combative here, but again, this just isn't always true. For the overall state of our economy and the safety of the wealth of the richest, maybe, but on one end of the unemployment chart it speaks to less people being able to make it by without jobs. Employment among people with disabilities is at its lowest[2], which speaks to our societies inability to care for those who need it. People with disabilities are not going out and finding jobs because bagging at a grocery store is fulfilling, they're doing it because they can't afford not to. On a different note, I'm really not trying to seem combative, and I hope you're enjoying our fake online discussion as much as I am. [1] https://positivemoney.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/CPI-inf...
[2] https://cepr.net/jobs-2023-1/ |
One difference in terms that we're having trouble with is "inflation". When I spoke of "inflation" previously, I meant it in the general sense, not specifically consumer goods prices, or some other subset of prices. By definition, that means that nominal wages are included. The price of labor is just another price that inflates along with everything else. Note that the chart you linked [1] says "CPI inflation" rather than simply "inflation".
As for the relationship between unemployment and inflation, it's in a standard economics textbook. Unfortunately, the evidence for the theory has been somewhat mixed.