Roxanne Jones: The Federal Reserve's policy of raising interest rates to slow spending is kind of aggressive. She says it really hits and hurts those who don't have all that much money. But while interest rate increases can be regressive, so is inflation, she says. Jones: Poor people in the economy tend to spend a lot more of their income on necessities.
In the struggle to control inflation, the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates five times already this year.
But those efforts can be blunted if companies keep raising prices regardless. And one industry has illustrated that difficulty particularly starkly: the car market.
Guest: Jeanna Smialek, a federal reserve and economy reporter for The New York Times.
Background reading:
- Many companies have been able to raise prices beyond their own increasing costs over the past two years, swelling their profitability but also exacerbating inflation. That is especially true in the car market.
- Inflation stayed far above the Federal Reserve’s goal in August, as prices climbed more quickly than economists expected.
For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.