An additional component of inflationary pressures is rising wages. Yet, with unemployment in the US stubbornly high and much of Europe embarking on an austerity drive, we have a further weakening in the case for investors to be too concerned with inflation for the time being. Wages are considered by many economists to be a driving force of inflation. This is especially powerful when workers begin to incorporate expectations about rising inflation into their wage demands.
However, recent data from the St. Louis Fed shows that inflation expectations are very subdued. Further helping to keep wages constrained is the fact that many workers who had envisioned early retirement are staying in the workforce longer than they expected. New college graduates are finding a less than welcoming job market in many parts of the world leaving employers facing a “buyer’s market” when it comes to adding workers. Even still, many employers seem to be preferring to have their existing workers work overtime rather than adding new employees.
Given the recent economic data and talk about the economy beginning to slow down in the US, the Fed has hinted that they are prepared to step into the markets to attempt to add more monetary stimulus. If that were to occur, the proponents of the “currency debasement” school of thought would certainly have some ammunition for their argument that gold is the best alternative for investors.
One point of caution: despite the limitless amounts of virtually free money that has been made available to the financial markets, the economic data continue to point to the fact that it will take longer than many thought to get a self sustaining economic recovery. With that, inflation seems to be something in the far off horizon.
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