Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich is blaming “corporate greed” as the driving force behind soaring inflation, insisting that wages are not to be blamed for the phenomenon.
“The underlying economic problem is profit-price inflation. It’s caused by corporations raising their prices above their increasing costs,” wrote Reich, who served in the Clinton administration.
“Corporations are using those increasing costs—of materials, components, and labor—as excuses to increase their prices even higher, resulting in bigger profits. This is why corporate profits are close to levels not seen in over half a century.”
Reich went on to blame the monopolistic or near monopolistic powers of corporations for their ability to keep raising prices without losing customers.
Just four companies, for example, control 85 percent of poultry and meat processing, two giant firms dominate consumer staples, one corporation sets the price of most of the seed corn used in the country, and five big pharmaceutical firms are causing drug prices to soar, Reich claims in the article.
Price Controls, Profit Recession
Reich called on the Biden administration and Congress to take direct action against “profit-price inflation” rather than allowing the Fed to raise interest rates and put the inflationary burden on the average American people.He called for enforcing “bold antitrust” standards, saying that even the credible threat of such enforcement can force corporations to not raise prices above their costs.
Reich also suggested implementing a tax on windfall profits, a temporary tax on price increases that exceed the Producers Price Index (PPI) cost of producing consumer products.
“I think that firms are actually doing exactly what they’re supposed to do. Where you could raise prices, you raise prices to make more money to invest for more production. That’s what we want the firms to do,” Zhang said.
Forcing companies to “stay put” with their prices can lead to shortages, he warned. In such a situation, consumers will start to hoard products, which will create “even more shortages.”
“It’s not only forecasting a profit recession, it’s forecasting the worst profit recession in 50 years,” she said. Pomboy predicted that Wall Street earnings forecasts will likely face sharp downward revisions and put more pressure on the equity markets.