Joey Politano 🏳️‍🌈 Profile picture
Nov 10, 2021 9 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 0.9% in October, making the year-on-year CPI inflation 6.2%.

I did a full break down of this month's CPI data in a the blog post below.

Here's a short thread with the important takeaways: 🧵
apricitas.substack.com/p/cpi-inflatio…
The CPI is currently running well ahead of its pre-COVID 2% growth trend, although it is worth acknowledging that the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (which the Federal Reserve targets) has shows significantly lower readings.
The pandemic has driven spending that would have gone to services into additional consumer and durable goods. Supply chains appear strained are operating under unprecedented order volumes. In other words, this is a crisis of abundance rather than a crisis of scarcity.
Today, goods prices tell a different story. Car prices have stalled, with used car and truck prices growing 2.5% after shrinking in August and September. This is partly because rising prices choked demand and partly because vaccinations are enabling additional services spending.
The rise in services spending has started to pull service sector prices back up to pre-pandemic growth rates. Take housing: As the economy strengthens and COVID abates, rent growth is climbing as workers return to cities and household formation starts up again.
However, to have sustained inflation, rising labor costs would have to be passed on to consumers by businesses across industries.
Current evidence contradicts this: price increases are concentrated in the goods sector while wage increases are concentrated in the service sector.
In addition, corporate profit margins have been increasing as prices rise faster than labor costs.

The widening spread between sales prices and unit labor costs indicate that large corporations are flexing their pricing power and have not suffered under tighter labor markets.
Fundamentally, sustained inflation cannot occur without above-trend income and spending growth. As of right now, both personal incomes and personal spending remain on-trend.

As long as nominal income growth remains on-trend inflation will slide back down to normal levels.
If you want more economic news and analysis, consider subscribing! It's free, and helps me out a ton.

These posts are part of a new series where I am breaking down regular data releases. All input is truly appreciated as these are a work-in-progress.

apricitas.substack.com

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More from @JosephPolitano

Apr 30
US Real GDP came in at a -0.3% annualized growth rate in Q1 2025. Consumption increased, the trade deficit exploded, investment jumped (primarily due to inventory buildups), & public-sector output shrank

Nominal GDP growth (unadjusted for inflation) came in at 3.5% annualized🧵 Image
The big story of Q1 was trade—and even though few of Trump's tariffs were in place by end-of-March, there was still a historic increase in the trade deficit.

This is the largest negative contribution from net exports on record, going back to 1947. Image
Much of the surge in imports was not related to increased consumption, but rather inventory buildup by corporations trying to get ahead of tariffs—inventory growth's contribution to GDP was the highest since late 2021 Image
Read 5 tweets
Mar 2
Trying to think about the state of the Effective Altruist movement and realizing Elon killing USAID probably overwhelms the total amount of good ever achieved by all EA global health donations. PEPFAR alone is $7B/yr, 10x total EA spending, & all USAID spending is only ~$30B/yr Image
the average USAID project is less effective than the average EA donation (because EAs are hard-filtering for the most effective known interventions) but even still USAID spends hundreds of millions on like effective anti-malaria programs, it's total impact is massive and now gone
but ya as it stands Elon's obsession with destroying USAID probably has a negative impact larger than the positive impact of the whole EA movement. Almost as large as the impact of all US charity done abroad too (only about ~$50B/yr according to Indiana U's philanthropy tracker)
Read 4 tweets
Dec 4, 2024
Today we got new GDP by Metro area data, so here's a thread breaking down the numbers by state/region!

Starting with California, where there's been a partial rebound in the Bay Area tech hubs while SoCal growth heavily trails the national & state average.🧵 Image
In Texas, Houston was able to claim the crown for the triangle's fastest-growth amidst a regional oil boom.

Growth in Austin & Dallas slowed to the more "normal" pace they tended to see pre-COVID, but remain well above the national average. Image
Growth in Florida's major metros all declined relatively uniformly, mostly settling near pre-COVID levels. That still leaves Florida as one of the fastest-growing states in the union & all major Florida metros growing significantly faster than the US average. Image
Read 7 tweets
Dec 3, 2024
NEW from Me:

The post-COVID economic recovery is leaving low-income countries behind. Extreme poverty has risen since 2019, and low-income countries are no longer catching up to high-income countries.

It could mean a lost decade for poverty reduction🧵
apricitas.io/p/low-income-c…
Over the last 40 years, the world has made historic progress in reducing the scourge of global poverty. The share of the human population living on less than $2.15/day has fallen from >40% to <10%. Yet progress has been too slow—and even worse, it has now stalled. Image
The first 20 years of this century also saw significant economic convergence that may now be over—over the last four years, low-income countries have seen slower growth than the US while middle-income countries only see weak positive relative growth Image
Read 8 tweets
Nov 26, 2024
NEW from me:

US productivity growth, the bedrock of long-run prosperity, is booming—and massively outshining peer nations. It's the fruit of running the labor market hot post-COVID, and now it's delivering higher wages, consumption, & welfare🧵
apricitas.io/p/americas-pro…
US productivity growth was stagnant in the immediate wake of the 2008 recession—but the aggressive fiscal & monetary response to the COVID recession has meant that productivity growth not only remained strong but actually accelerated from the pre-COVID pace. Image
America's recent productivity growth is all the more impressive in an international context—pre-COVID, the US was already leading major peer nations in productivity growth, but post-COVID it has more than double the productivity gains of the next-fastest country. Image
Read 10 tweets
Sep 11, 2024
America's industrial policy push has caused an unprecedented boom of investments in chip manufacturing, clean energy, & infrastructure

But those investments aren't spread evenly, instead having regional dynamics that are reshaping US economic geography🧵 Image
America's investment boom has affected every part of the country, but intentionally wasn't spread evenly across the US

In particular, states building major chip fabs have had unprecedented construction growth—that's Arizona (+$36B,+430%), Texas (+$41B,+84%), & Ohio (+$20B,+200%) Image
Regionally, America's recent manufacturing investment boom has served to defend growth in the Rust Belt while accelerating growth in the Sun Belt—and outside of some semiconductor fabs planned for NY & Oregon, those dynamics should continue going forward. Image
Read 12 tweets

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