The behaviour of profit margins plays an important role in inflation dynamics. If firms feel that their pricing power has increased they will decide to raise their prices relative to their input costs, leading to higher corporate profits. And if their input costs, including wages, rise, they may decide to lower their profit margins if they feel unable to pass on the cost increase to consumers.
These considerations suggest that the surge in inflation in the US since the onset of Covid, which led to a decline in real incomes for workers, may have been associated with an increase in corporate profits. Rising wage costs can be seen as the consequence of workers seeking to restore their real incomes and may be partially absorbed by a lowering of profit margins to their pre-Covid level.
To explore this topic, pre-tax corporate profits as a share of nominal GDP was used as a proxy for US corporate profit margins. The figure below shows this measure together with inflation over four quarters and the growth rate over four quarters of the Employment Cost Index, which measures wage and other labour costs, in the US.1,2 Profits are positively correlated with inflation (correlation = 0.4) and negatively correlated with the growth rate of employment costs (correlation = -0.2).