New Report Details How 'Inflation Inequality' Punishes the Poor—and Helps Undercount Them by Millions
A new report released Tuesday claims that the number of people in poverty in the U.S. is being undercounted by three million due to “inflation inequality,” the process by which prices rise more quickly for those on the bottom end of the economy.
Groundwork Collaborative’s “The Cost of Being Poor” (pdf) examines the way that inflation inequality is making it difficult to accurately calculate the number of people living in poverty.
The study relies on research by co-author and London School of Economics professor Xavier Jaravel, who found earlier in 2019 that “annual inflation rates for those at the bottom of the income distribution are substantially higher than for those at the top of the income distribution, effectively increasing income inequality.”
Using this methodology as a starting point for the analysis, Jaravel and his co-authors analyzed income numbers and found the rate of poverty and inequality in the U.S. is likely far below prior measurements:
Jaravel told The Atlantic that the price increases come from a lack of competition for production of low-income consumer goods. While higher-income consumers have more options, and thus more price competition, lower income Americans are stuck with fewer options.
According to The Atlantic:
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