Critics say corporate greed is making inflation worse, citing record profits despite rising costs

Skyrocketing inflation has been pinned on supply chain bottlenecks, worker pay increases and surging consumer demand – all symptoms of an economy still emerging from the pandemic-induced downturn.

But left-leaning think tanks and lawmakers are increasingly pointing to what they say is an even bigger culprit: corporate greed.

Companies, they say, are jacking up prices by more than is required to offset their rising wholesale costs, padding their profits while using supply snags as cover.

“They see (inflation) as an opportunity,” says Lindsay Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative, a progressive economic policy research group. “It’s a convenient pretext.”

Conservative economists say such arguments cast an unfair shadow over basic laws of supply and demand. Americans, they argue, have lots of money and are willing to pay the higher prices triggered by product shortages.

HOW HIGH WILL IT GO?: This economist bucks conventional wisdom on curbing inflation. His solution isn't easy.

BEHIND THE BIAS: EXCLUSIVE: Asian women are shut out of leadership at America's top companies. Our data shows why

There is no federal law barring a company from charging consumers whatever it likes as long it doesn’t collude with its competitors to boost prices by an agreed-upon amount. Thirty-eight states do prohibit raising prices excessively during disasters or emergencies.

That could change. Citing “unprecedented corporate greed,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, introduced a bill last month that would impose a 95% tax on large corporations’ “excess profits.” It would be the first such windfall profits tax since World War II.

Healthy corporate profits

Exhibit A in progressives’ case for price gouging is the current earnings season. The net profit margin of Standard & Poor’s 500 companies in the first quarter has been running at 12.3%, based on estimates and earnings reported so far, according to FactSet. That’s down from a peak of 13.1% in the second quarter of last year but well above the pre-COVID-19 level of about 11%.

The strong showing came despite annual inflation that climbed to a 40-year high of 8.6% in March, which should have squeezed companies' profits.

And last year, the aggregate profit margin of nonfinancial corporate businesses hovered above 13% in all four quarters, the best performance in 70 years, according to a Bloomberg analysis of government data.

“Profit margins should be coming down,” says Owens of Groundwork Collaborative, who testified at a Senate Budget Committee hearing on corporate profiteering and inflation early this month. Instead, she noted, “they’re actually growing.”