News | The Investor
20 Apr 2024 20:57
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Business > Features > The Investor

    Wage Cuts Create Problems

    Increasingly, I am running into people who are taking pay cuts in one form or another in the interest of their struggling employers. I am also aware of a number of companies that have trimmed staff incomes, often by 5% - 10%.


    Investment Research Group
    Investment Research Group
    This is not just happening in NZ but appears to be a global phenomenon. In the UK, wages have been declining for some time, reflecting a cutback in bonuses in many industries. Average weekly earnings have fallen by up to 5.8% in some months this year.

    In the USA, wages have fallen by 4.7% in the 12 months to June, the biggest drop since records began in 1960, according to Commerce Department figures.

    As I have mentioned before, deflation is a good thing when it applies to prices (despite hysterical headlines that suggest otherwise) but it is a very bad thing when it affects the circulation of money in an economy.

    If people have less money to spend, either through retiring debt or lower incomes, then the economy shrinks. Usually, companies react to this by lowering prices and reducing non-essential costs and staff until the recession blows over.

    For the past several decades, the average recession in this country has lasted 18 months. Occasionally, however, a deflationary spiral occurs. If the usual measures aren't enough, companies are forced to ask employees to take pay cuts, which most do in order to protect their jobs.

    This makes the economy shrink even further, forcing further price and wage cuts. Such a spiral is very hard to fix because the usual central bank practice of printing extra money and cutting interest rates doesn't work.

    If people have more money, they save it or retire debt faster, which does nothing to stimulate the demand for goods and services.

    US commentator Steve Saville notes that most views about whether the future will be deflationary or inflationary focus on what will happen to the huge quantity of reserves that the Federal Reserve and other central banks has supplied to the banking industry over the past year.

    The inflationists believe this will lead to a massive increase in the money supply as banks increase their lending. The deflationists, however, are of the opinion that bank balance sheets are so stressed that they can't afford to lend big-time.

    There is also a third group, that he calls the 'just-rightists', who believe that the Fed and others have done a wonderful job of staving off deflation, and will one day remove the excess bank reserves before an inflation problem arises.

    "Our view, which will undoubtedly be considered sacrilegious in some quarters, is that the level of reserves within the banking system is not central to the inflation/deflation issue," he says.

    Saville agrees with deflationists that the banking industry won't contribute significantly to growth in the economy-wide supplies of money and credit over the years ahead, almost regardless of what happens to bank reserves.

    However, he believes they have overlooked the role of the government in doing the same thing. "While there is certainly a risk that the banking system's massive infusion of reserves will eventually contribute to the overall inflation problem, our inflation forecast in no way depends on such an eventuality," he concludes.

    In other words, the outlook is still for inflation, but perhaps not a lot of it for some time.

    © 2024 David McEwen, NZCity

     Other The Investor News
     12 Sep: Fixed vs. floating rates – which is best for you?
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The inaugural Taupo 400 Supercars has a Kiwi champion More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Demand for pet-friendly rentals are likely to rise with new changes to rental bonds More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Prince William promised to "look after" Catherine, Princess of Wales on his first official engagement since she revealed she had been diagnosed with cancer 20:40

    Law and Order:
    Man dies after setting himself on fire outside court where Donald Trump is on trial 20:17

    Entertainment:
    Orlando Bloom fell in love with "Katheryn, this girl from Santa Barbara", not Katy Perry the pop star 20:10

    Entertainment:
    Olivia Munn found one of the "hardest things" in her cancer battle was being unable to pick up her son after surgery 19:40

    Motoring:
    A serious single-vehicle crash has closed State Highway 6 in lower Buller Gorge 19:17

    Entertainment:
    Idris Elba joked he'd "more famous for not playing James Bond" than past actors who have had the role 19:10

    Netball:
    The Central Pulse's squad depth has prevailed in round two of the ANZ Netball Premiership, at home the Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic 18:57

    Rugby:
    The inaugural Taupo 400 Supercars has a Kiwi champion 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Rihanna's new album could be a family affair as she may get her sons to join her on a song 18:40

    Entertainment:
    Olly Murs was heartbroken after being separated from his daughter just hours after announcing her birth 18:10


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd