OK, hands up all those who believe the inflation numbers churned out regularly by the eggheads at the relevant body in your home country. Were we all together in one room right now, my guess is that there would not be many hands, and that those whose hands were indeed up would feel somewhat embarrassed by them.
Maybe there is a perfectly reasonable explanation for those hands that are up, such as feeble mindedness of the owner, or an involuntary twitch. If there is anyone who really does believe government inflation numbers and is not locked in an institution of some kind, I would expect to find them in the rainy, midge-infested lands of Inverness, hunting the Loch Ness Monster, collecting car number plates or swimming in the freezing Danube on Christmas morning.
In a recent telephone conversation with HedgeWorld, commodities bull Jim Rogers was caustic about inflation numbers. “Most governments just lie about them,” he said. And at the GAIM conference in Monaco in June, political economist Marvin Zonis, professor emeritus at the University of Chicago’s graduate school of business, made a similar observation on certain emerging markets. Inflation statistics produced by some of these countries are sometimes understated “by as much as 75%”, he said. “Because, of course, the governments in developed markets would never lie to their populations about inflation,” interjected one observer, with not a little irony. Judging by the noises of approval from Mr. Zonis and the rest of the audience, he had struck a chord.
The problem with inflation numbers isn’t that they are falsified, it is that governments and others can selectively identify certain aspects of them to say pretty well anything, making consensus very difficult to achieve. Some economists are pointing to the sharp overall rises this year in the prices of oil, food and other commodities which have eroded buying power. This is the basis of their identifying inflation as a major threat, and hence their support for some degree of monetary tightening.
But looking at the same statistics Jacques Mechelany, chief investment officer at Asia-focused hedge fund firm Heritage Fund Management, said the real threat is deflation. He notes that there are four main components to inflation—housing costs, labor costs, discretionary spending and staples costs—and we can not just focus on one of these in isolation if we want to true picture of an economy’s overall health.
The problem is governments can and do use their weighting of these components to “massage” the numbers. “It is an issue that vested interests can choose to measure inflation with so many different indexes and manipulate them to present whatever picture they want,” Mr. Mechelany told HedgeWorld. However, he noted, voluntary manipulation in an environment where everyone can publish their own index is very difficult. A number of independent institutions make their own inflation calculations, he noted, but trends are similar to official numbers. Nonetheless, official inflation figures are often disputed by consumer groups, who often complain that the numbers mask what is really happening to purchasing power.
Just so. While there has been a jump in developed nations’ inflation numbers since the start of the year—the Euro area recently reporting that the index had exceeded the 4% mark for the first time in several years—this reflects little on what has happened to purchasing power. In Italy, the price of petrol and of bread have both doubled over the past year, while housing costs and labor costs appear to have remained stable. But if labor costs have remained stable, then purchasing power has decreased by 4%—that is to say, the rate of inflation—even if the statistics are accurate.
If the truth be told, the purchasing power of the average worker has been shot to pieces in recent years. In the euro area many people, politicians included, have recognized this, but tried to lay the blame at the door of the euro itself. But the erosion of purchasing power has been going on far longer than that. Do I have any evidence of this? Indeed I do.
One simple example. In 1960 my parents arrived in the United Kingdom (from India) and after four years of work (and while supporting a wife and initially one child, although the number had risen to three by 1964) managed to put down a deposit to buy a three bedroom house. He was earning what would be called an average wage. That would hardly be possible anywhere in the developed world now. But I have an example from closer to home.
Twenty years ago I left the United Kingdom for Italy for a two week holiday. A friend of mine who studied there suggested it might be a good idea for me to stay for a year, work and learn the language. I managed to find a part time job as an English teacher, and took in about a million lire a month for my troubles… about $700 at that time. It wasn’t a huge amount, but it allowed me to pay the rent, eat out five times a week, run a car (which, for a non-Italian living in Italy, now seems like a very brave thing to do)… in short, most of the things a working person would wish or need to do.
If I had wanted to blow all my meager wages on the lethal aperitif that was in vogue at the time, a fiendish cocktail of Campari, bitters and white wine (sometimes with a dash of gin) served in any of the chic bars in the center of town, I could have bought 1,250 of them with my monthly income, the drink itself costing 800 lire a shot.
Fast forward to twenty years later. The same aperitif in the same bar now costs 2 euro and 50 cents. In the meantime, the wage for the same part time teaching job has risen to about 1,300 euro. Hold on… That means that someone doing the same job as I did all those years ago would only be able to afford 560 aperitifs, less than half the number possible twenty years ago. Talk about erosion of purchasing power.
“Aha,” you might say, “but you were living in Italy. Everyone knows that ALL Italian governments lie ALL the time, so why expect them to tell the truth about something as politically sensitive as inflation?” I could not fault your logic on this. But try the test yourself and see if I’m right.