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@SirRumpole , i understand a deep ingrained "corporate" hate linked to i would suggest a left minded culture ..and i am all good with that, i erred there too in my youth.Corporate profits the underlying cause of inflation ?
'We've definitely got a profit crisis': Is corporate gouging the biggest cause of inflation?
Soaring corporate profits are being blamed for fuelling inflation, as figures show companies in Australia are enjoying sky-rocketing profits despite the pandemic.www.abc.net.au
But this is their ABC so a story straight from the ALP narrative.
Corporate profits the underlying cause of inflation ?
Indeed, past news but only to justify some dpecial taxes etc which could finish already struggling economy.That particular piece is four months behind the curve. It was mooted in June in this article.
Are record corporate profits driving inflation? Here's what experts think.
Economists disagree over whether record corporate profits have driven inflation.abcnews.go.com
yes the lag in data , is a big trap ( like relying on a formal declaration of recession )Indeed, past news but only to justify some dpecial taxes etc which could finish already struggling economy.
The issue with relying on ato and abs whhichare aleays being the curve..a bit like using MA() on too long a period......?
That particular piece is four months behind the curve. It was mooted in June in this article.
Are record corporate profits driving inflation? Here's what experts think.
Economists disagree over whether record corporate profits have driven inflation.abcnews.go.com
Hah, ask 3 economists the same question and get 4 different answers.
was that PPI a result of artificially lowered energy( oil/gas ) costs. ??PPI up 0.2 month on month vs estimated 0.4. Year on year 8.0 vs 8.3 estimated. More good data. Everything pumping.
So more sanctions at minimum if those missiles were russian, double digits inflation... official that isStray Russian rockets have hit Poland, 2 people killed...
It is instructive to see the rather different take on these figures by the ABC NewsWages growth accelerated to the fastest pace in a decade over the three months to September, but remained less than half the pace of inflation and confirmed the ongoing hit to workers’ real pay rates.
The wage price index lifted by 1 per cent in the third quarter lifting the annual increase to 3.1 per cent, from 2.6 per cent in the year to June, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
In seasonally adjusted terms, this growth was primarily driven by increases in wages for the private sector, which grew at twice the rate of wages in the public sector through the quarter, at 1.2 per cent compared to 0.6 per cent.
ABS program manager of prices Michelle Marquardt said it was “the highest quarterly growth in hourly wages recorded since March quarter 2012”.
The data also showed that a larger proportion of workers were getting bigger pay rises.
“Labour market pressures in the private sector combined with the largest Fair Work Commission award increase in more than a decade saw rises in both the size of average wage changes, and the proportion of private sector jobs recording a wage change,” Ms Marquardt said.
The figures from the same quarter a year ago showed a somewhat different story.The official measure of wages growth is finally starting to take off, but public sector workers like Kimbra Pettit are being left further behind.
Key points:
- Quarterly wage growth of 1.2 per cent in the private sector was the strongest in 12 years
- Public sector wage growth for the quarter and the year remained around 2019 levels
- The ABS said the largest Fair Work award wage increase in more than a decade contributed to private sector wage growth
The official wage price index jumped 1 per cent over the September quarter, the fastest rate of increase since March 2012, and was up 3.1 per cent over the year to September.
Stats are a wonderful thing, you can make them show just about anything you want.Australian Bureau of Statistics data shows private sector wage growth is subdued to lower rates than the public sector during financial shocks, including the global financial crisis. This has also been borne out during the coronavirus recession, with the latest data showing a 0.2 per cent rise in the wage price index in the June quarter, the lowest increase on record.
Private sector wages increased 0.1 per cent, while the public sector jumped 0.6 per cent over the same period.
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