this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2024
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Economics
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It’s been about 3.2% all year, and with the very notable exception of 2021/2022 Covid-gouging years, it was more like 1.5%
6.25% per year sounds pretty good.
The problem, usually, is that that number is an average from a variety of different areas of life. If you can expect to make purchases from all those places at once then it’s mostly fine but that’s not what happens.
Instead, housing and food shoot through the fucking roof, especially housing where a lot of people tend to live. Once the solution is “move far away from your community just to be able to afford a home” then that solution is basically just invalid. Luxury goods don’t up nearly as fast, they have real competition and people can, usually, not buy those products so there needs to be some level of sanity there. You end up with a situation where poor people end up experiencing a rate of inflation far higher and more stressful than the average implies. And guess what? Most people are poor these days, even the ones who’d like to not believe it.
And then you add on to that that if your company does not give you a raise based on inflation by default then even if they match it and pat themselves on the back you did not recieve a raise. Matching inflation or less means that you’ve lost salary even if the number is technically higher. You only get a raise when your buying power exceeds the year before.
Right, Grocery prices for example have increased by 25 percent over the past four years, outpacing overall inflation of 19 percent during the same period
Rents loolz
Only if your comp is already market rate lol
This says 70% of respondents think it’s fair enough.
It’s not like Dollar General.
We ain't talking about "feels" mate
Market rate is set by the market, not feelz
So that’s what the “market” in Market rate is.
I figured it was, like, some guy named Mark and he, like, rated things.
It isn't per year though, it only lasts 4.
Then they negotiate again, I assume?