Analysis Shows How Corporate Profits Drive Inflation—Even as Business Costs Go Down

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Julia Conley is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

Inflation has eased over the last two years, and with supply chains no longer struggling to keep up with demand and companies' business costs stabilizing, an analysis out Thursday asks: Why haven't American households seen the benefits of a more secure economy, with the prices of consumer goods and services falling?The answer, said economic justice think tank Groundwork Collaborative, is that high prices linked to the coronavirus pandemic were never just the result of higher labor and...

4% in the same time period. Groundwork Collaborative used the example of the U.S. diaper industry, in which just two companies—Procter & Gamble and Kimberly-Clark—control 70% of the domestic market.Families are paying an average of 30% more for diapers than they were in 2019—and from 2021-23, high prices were partially linked to the soaring cost of wholesale wood pulp, a component of diapers.

 

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