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Inflation Winners And Losers
Zubu Brothers ^ | 1-27-2022 | Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog

Posted on 01/27/2022 4:06:57 PM PST by blam

The clear winners in inflation are those who require little from global supply chains, the frugal, and those who own their own labor, skills and enterprises.

As the case for systemic inflation builds, the question arises: who wins and who loses in an up-cycle of inflation? The general view is that inflation is bad for almost everyone, but this ignores the big winners in an inflationary cycle.

As I’ve explained here and in my new book Global Crisis, National Renewal, the two primary dynamics globally are 1) scarcity of essentials and 2) extremes of wealth/power inequality.

Scarcities drive prices higher simply as a result of supply-demand. Conventional economics holds that there are always cheaper substitutes for everything and hence there can never be scarcities enduring long enough to drive inflation: if steak gets costly, then consumers can buy cheaper chicken, etc.

But the conventional view overlooks essentials for which there is no substitute. Salt water may be cheap but it’s no substitute for fresh water. There are no scalable substitutes for oil and natural gas. There are no scalable substitutes for hydrocarbon-derived fertilizers or plastics. As energy becomes more expensive due to the mass depletion of the cheap-to-extract resources, the costs of everything from fertilizer to plastics to steel to jet fuel rise.

This price pressure generates a number of effect. Rising costs embed a self-reinforcing feedback as prices are pushed higher in expectation of higher costs ahead, and these price increases generate the very inflation that sparked the pre-emptive price increase.

Second, increasing costs either reduce profits or force price increases. Neither is ideal, as higher prices tend to lower sales which then lowers profits.

Third, prices rise easily but drop only stubbornly, so sharp increases in prices aren’t reversed as cost pressures ease: enterprises and workers quickly become accustomed to the higher prices and pay and are extremely resistant to cutting either prices or pay.

As I’ve outlined here before, extremes of wealth-power inequality are systemically destabilizing. Extremes generate reversals as the pendulum reaches its maximum and then reverses direction and gathers momentum to the opposite extreme. In terms of wealth-power inequality, the pendulum is finally swinging back toward higher wages for labor and higher taxes for the super-wealthy, and increasing regulation on exploitive monopolies.

In other words, there is more driving systemic inflation than just “transitory” supply-demand issues. Speaking of supposedly “transitory” cost increases that are actually systemic, global supply chains that were deflationary (i.e. pushing prices lower) for 40 years are now inflationary (i.e. pushing prices higher) as costs rise sharply in exporting economies that are now facing much higher labor and energy costs, and also finally bearing the long-delayed costs of environmental damage caused by rampant industrialization.

As noted here in The Real Revolution Is Underway But Nobody Recognizes It, labor has been stripmined for 45 years, and now the worm has turned. As much as corporate employers and governments would love outright indentured servitude where they could force everyone to work for low pay in abusive circumstances, people are still free to figure out how to simplify their lives, cut expenses and work less.

Scarcities of labor are enabling sharp increases in pay, especially in services. Anecdotally, I’m hearing accounts of service workers such as therapists, plumbers, accountants, architects, etc. raising their hourly rates by 20% overnight. In my own little sliver of the economy (writing / editing content), hourly rates are up as much as 30% for experienced independents.

So let’s highlight a few winners and losers in a self-reinforcing inflationary spiral.

Asset inflation driven by zero interest rates and a tsunami of central bank liquidity will lose steam as rates rise and the liquidity spigots are turned off. As mortgage rates rise, already overvalued homes will become even less affordable as the number of buyers who can afford much higher monthly payments recedes toward zero.

Local governments dependent on skyrocketing real estate valuations driving higher property taxes will be losers.

Bonds paying 1% interest are losers once rates click up to 2% or 3%.

Stocks are a mixed bag, as the relatively few companies with unlimited pricing power may benefit from inflation, but the majority will be pressured by higher labor, materials, shipping and energy costs, plus higher taxes and fees as the claw-back from capital gathers momentum.

Consumers are losers as costs soar, but service workers with pricing power are winners. The Federal Reserve can print $1 trillion in an instant but it can’t print experienced welders, plumbers, electricians, accountants, therapists, etc., and very little of this labor can be replaced by low-level (i.e. affordable) automation / robotics.

Farmers who have been decimated by decades of low-cost imports might gain some pricing power as adverse weather, higher shipping costs and other factors increase the cost of imported agricultural commodities. Corporations with quasi-monopolies on essential industrial minerals/metals such as magnesium, nickel, etc. will have pricing power due to scarcity and the wide moat around their businesses: it isn’t cheap to set up competing mines and acquire rights to the minerals.

As a general rule, keep an eye on inelastic demand and supply. Elastic demand refers to demand which can ebb and flow with costs–the classic substitution mentioned earlier in which costly beef is replaced by cheaper chicken. Elastic supply is ranchers responding to much higher beef prices by increasing their herds.

There is always some elasticity in demand and supply as conservation, new efficiencies, recessions, etc. can stretch or shrink supplies and demand. But demand for essentials such as fertilizer, energy and food can only drop so much, and supply can only increase by so much.

The clear winners in inflation are those who require little from global supply chains, the frugal, and those who own their own labor, skills and enterprises in sectors with relatively inelastic supply and demand. The losers are those who are entirely dependent on global supply chains for essentials, wastrels who squander resources, food, labor and money and those gambling on the quick return to zero-interest largesse and endless trillions in liquidity.



TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: economy; financial; inflation; iylm; oodaloop; predictions; prepper; preppers; prices; shtf; survival
Sewer work I had done recently (two weeks ago), in my opinion, should have cost about $400.00-$500.00, it wound up costing $1,681.00.

BTW, twenty years ago I could have done the work myself. It required no tools that I didn't have already.

I did overhear one guy who had returned with supplies say to another guy, "you won't believe how much I paid for that pipe."

They were very prompt and efficient, I can say that.

1 posted on 01/27/2022 4:06:57 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
The Real Revolution Is Underway But Nobody Recognizes It

"So the real revolution takes place out of the spotlight, as one person at a time opts out."

Going Galt!

"The conservative version of "I'm movin' to Canada!" Referring to John Galt from Ayn Rand's novel "Atlas Shrugged", Going Galt means leaving what you see as a society crumbling in on itself and going somewhere else to watch it all burn to the ground."

2 posted on 01/27/2022 4:13:47 PM PST by blam
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To: blam

I just hope it waits a few more years so I can effectively sell off everything here and move away.

Expat life sounds pretty darn good these days.


3 posted on 01/27/2022 4:37:19 PM PST by datura (Eventually, the Lord and the Truth will win.)
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To: blam

“As energy becomes more expensive due to the mass depletion of the cheap-to-extract resources, the costs of everything from fertilizer to plastics to steel to jet fuel rise.”

That is a pretty foolish view on the energy crisis. Trump had no problem finding plenty of “cheap to extract resources”.


4 posted on 01/27/2022 4:42:53 PM PST by hardspunned (former GOP globalist stooge)
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To: blam; Pollard; metmom; Tilted Irish Kilt

Great article!

Pinging a few.


5 posted on 01/27/2022 4:50:09 PM PST by Jane Long (What we were told was a “conspiracy theory” in 2020 is now fact. 🙏🏻 Ps 33:12)
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To: hardspunned

Foolish? Or, realistic?

I don’t know how to tell you this....but, there is a POSER in the WH, right now....and, he is doing NOTHING to help our economy/citizens, like Pres Trump did.

These commies have NO interest in ‘finding plenty of cheap energy to extract’, sadly.


6 posted on 01/27/2022 4:52:11 PM PST by Jane Long (What we were told was a “conspiracy theory” in 2020 is now fact. 🙏🏻 Ps 33:12)
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To: blam

I spent $900 for 60 feet of 4 inch PVC Sewer Drain Line a couple months ago, a year ago it was $400


7 posted on 01/27/2022 6:03:31 PM PST by eyeamok (founded in cynicism, wrapped in sarcasm)
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To: blam

Winner: Communist China
Loser: The rest of the world.


8 posted on 01/27/2022 6:05:39 PM PST by gitmo (If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
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To: blam

The winners are those owing fixed rate debt.


9 posted on 01/27/2022 6:21:09 PM PST by Romulus
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To: blam

How are the “frugal” winners if their savings are turned into Weimar bucks?


10 posted on 01/27/2022 8:23:17 PM PST by PTBAA
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To: blam

Been going Galt for years FRiend.
Shame what’s happening to this once great country.


11 posted on 01/27/2022 9:23:49 PM PST by bicyclerepair (On Telegram, I'm "TooDamTall" no quotes)
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To: hardspunned

Yeah, left-wing propaganda, I noticed it too.
Writer is a piece of slime for including it.


12 posted on 01/28/2022 7:40:15 AM PST by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change with out notice.)
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To: hardspunned; blam; 4everontheRight; 4Liberty; 5thGenTexan; 45semi; 101stAirborneVet; 300winmag; ...
Prepper ping : How to financially survive,.. and then thrive during inflation
Determining what is essential during a financial collapse

hardspunned :" “As energy becomes more expensive due to the mass depletion of the cheap-to-extract resources,
the costs of everything from fertilizer to plastics to steel to jet fuel rise.”
That is a pretty foolish view on the energy crisis.
Trump had no problem finding plenty of “cheap to extract resources”."

(My comment) read the OP and comments
Then, ..re-read it for comprehension !
There is some good information here that will be ignored by most,
but the folks who are 'aware' will take to heart, and then take action.

13 posted on 01/28/2022 9:21:35 AM PST by Tilted Irish Kilt
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

;-)


14 posted on 01/28/2022 9:22:21 AM PST by Jane Long (What we were told was a “conspiracy theory” in 2020 is now fact. 🙏🏻 Ps 33:12)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

I’m guessing farmers who use natural/permaculture methods, with minimal inputs, will probably come out ahead.

Good reason to grow your own.


15 posted on 01/29/2022 8:28:53 AM PST by Ellendra (A single lie on our side does more damage than a thousand lies on their side.)
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