64 The Economist February 19th 2022
Finance & economics
Labourv capital
The battle of the markups
“A
good compromise”, the saying goes,
“is when both parties are dissatis
fied.” Dissatisfaction rages in the post
lockdown economy. Households say that
pricegouging companies are jacking up
prices, contributing to an inflation rate
across the rich world of 6.6% year on year.
Companies bat such accusations aside, be
lieving that they are the truly wronged par
ty. They complain that staff have become
workshy ingrates who demand everhigh
er wages. Earlier this month Andrew Bai
ley, the governor of the Bank of England,
courted controversy by suggesting that
workers should moderate their wage de
mands—even as he failed to tell companies
not to raise their prices.
A “battle of the markups”, between
higher wages and higher shop prices, is un
der way. And there can only be one winner,
all else being equal. Broadly speaking, eco
nomic output must flow either to owners
of capital, in the form of profits, dividends
and rents, or to labour, as wages, salaries
and perks. Economists refer to this as the
“capital” or “labour” share of gdp. Which of
the two has the upper hand in the post
lockdown economy?
The Economist has compiled a range of
indicators to answer this question. First
we calculate a highfrequency measure of
the capitallabour share across 30 mostly
rich countries. In 2020 the aggregate la
bour share across this group soared (see
chart 1 on next page). This was largely be
cause firms continued to pay people’s wag
es—helped, in large part, by government
stimulus programmes—even as gdp col
lapsed. Advantage, labour.
More recently, however, the battle
seems to have shifted in favour of capital.
Since reaching a peak in 2020 the rich
world labour share has fallen by 2.3 per
centage points. Frustratingly, the data only
go up to September 2021—and most econo
mists anyway argue that labour’s share is
not a perfect gauge of economic fairness,
since it is devilishly hard to measure. The
evidence since then suggests that coun
tries fall into one of three buckets, depend
ing on how the battle of the markups is
playing out.
In the first camp is Britain. There, un
derlying wage growth is in the region of 5%
a year, unusually fast by richworld stan
dards. But corporations seem not to have a
great deal of pricing power, meaning that
they are struggling to fully offset higher
costs in the form of higher prices. Digging
into Britain’s national accounts, we esti
mate that the nominal profit in pounds per
unit of goods and services sold is only
S AN FRANCISCO
Companies are raising prices. Workers are demanding higher wages.
Who is winning?
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