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What if US wealth inequality reverses?

Connor Fitzgerald, CFA, Fixed Income Portfolio Manager, Credit
Trevor Noren, Director Thematic Strategy
2024-09-30
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The views expressed are those of the authors at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional, or accredited investors only.

There may be no contrarian question with more potential to upend the US investment paradigm than this: What if US wealth inequality were to reverse?

For decades, rising inequality has shaped the US economy and, by extension, investment returns. Now, many of the factors that have long contributed to inequality are shifting, from monetary policy to globalization to organized labor. A reversal of inequality would have deep, far-reaching ripple effects across asset classes. 

Understanding the role of inequality in the US economy

Some of our experts have been outlining a US macroeconomic regime shift for some time now. In these efforts, they’ve dissected the concentration of capital among a select few mega-cap tech stocks, inflation, interest rates, the rise of passive rather than active management, and more. Now, we believe it’s time to consider wealth inequality, another economic hallmark of the post-global financial crisis (GFC) period in the US and elsewhere.

Wealth inequality has been an ongoing concern among pundits, politicians, academics, financial analysts, and more for years. It’s a potential systemic threat to US stability both politically and economically. The reasons for global economic inequality over the past three decades are many:

  • Globalization has played a role — China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, which effectively added one billion people to the labor pool, arguably represents one of the biggest labor supply shocks in modern history. 
  • Digitization has driven capital toward intangible-heavy business at the expense of labor-intensive, tangible-asset-based businesses. 
  • Loose monetary policy has inflated the value of investment assets, disproportionately increasing the wealth of asset owners versus laborers.

As some of these global trends unwind and reverse, is it possible that wealth inequality could do the same?

The case for the reversal of wealth inequality

It’s possible that a reversal of wealth inequality may have begun before the COVID-19 pandemic and accelerated in the time since. Labor supply appears likely to be structurally constrained moving forward, particularly in developed markets (a podcast from our colleagues Juhi Dhawan and Nick Wylenzek explores this topic in-depth), spiking labor’s negotiating power. Meanwhile, decarbonization and deglobalization efforts have intensified worldwide, which should trigger greater fiscal and corporate investment in tangible assets. What’s more, we’ve entered a regime of higher nominal rates which could see the transfer of wealth from the Fed and banks to consumers. If a reversal of wealth inequality were to come about, there would be significant market and investment implications. A reversal could undergird persistent inflation or alter consumer spending patterns. In our view, it’s not too early to consider the possibility of an inflection point. 

For some time now, we’ve theorized that consumer spending resilience could surprise to the upside in the face of high and rising interest rates, a notion which has not necessarily aligned with broad consensus expectations. But, in our view, the narrative around the low-end consumer is misguided, if not wrong. For years, policy changes and the like have tended to benefit top earners, often to the detriment of the lower quintiles of earners. While the top 5% is always going to be better off than the bottom 20%, the relative fortunes of these cohorts may have reversed in the past few years. 

For example, consider real estate, which has been on a tear for the past decade, but saw prices accelerate to new highs during the pandemic. The net effect of higher rates is a positive cash flow development for the household sector in aggregate. This is most powerful for the top-income quintile, but also net positive for the lowest-income quintile. Among this group, 60% of wealth is in real estate, so it’s possible that lower-income homeowners may have benefitted from the recent real-estate sector dynamics. We think this is important and if the status quo remains, the net interest income flowing to these household may be set to grow.

Is progress sustainable?

While, of course, wealth inequality undoubtedly exists and an ultra-wealthy few have a far more advantageous economic stronghold than the lowest quintile of earners, perhaps some progress has been made. The question now: Is this progress sustainable?

There are several things to consider in trying to answer this question. Real estate will obviously be a determining factor. Some analysts predict a major pullback in home prices, if not a collapse. However, we maintain the conviction that home prices could surprise to the upside given a significant supply/demand imbalance and argue that the US may be short more than a million single-family homes. It’s worth noting, however, that price appreciation has slowed under the weight of higher interest rates and home prices have been flat since June 2022. We expect this resilience to continue, with only a slight decline in home prices through the end of 2023. 

Meanwhile, we expect wage inflation to continue bolstering low-end consumer spending power. In recent years, the rate of wage growth among workers with a high school degree versus a four-year college degree have come into parallel. Previously, wage growth tended to be higher among college-educated employees.1  There’s good reason to believe that this trend will continue. 

Additionally, labor shortages persist across many industries. As of the end of 2022, the leisure and hospitality industries were still down more than 50,000 workers compared to February 2020.2  In durable goods manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, education, and health services, there are more unfilled job openings than unemployed workers with experience in their respective industry. In fact, even if every single unemployed person with experience in the durable goods manufacturing industry were employed, 25% of the available jobs in this industry would remain unfilled.3

The resurgence of organized labor could buoy middle and low-end worker wages. In fact, de-unionization has accounted for roughly a third of the growth in the wage gap between high- and middle-income workers since 1979.4  As labor has gained negotiating power in recent years, we see a corresponding uptick in union membership and “major work stoppages.” This momentum appears to be increasing in 2023, headlined by the writers’ and actors’ strike in the entertainment industry and by the massive United Auto Workers strike — both explicitly undergirded by inequality-driven grievances that top executives (and the biggest celebrities, in the case of the entertainment industry) are taking home too big a piece of the total pie. Today, 71% of Americans approve of unions — the highest approval rating since 1965.5

Where could we go from here?

For roughly 30 years, the growing wealth divide has seemingly been an unstoppable force. Many of the driving factors remain in place. Industry consolidation is still at historic extremes. Digitization continues to rapidly progress, and artificial intelligence (AI) threatens to accelerate automation to new heights, creating fear for labor's future negotiating power. Moreover, a presidential election looms in 2024 and one way or another, the outcome will have implications for the future of US wealth inequality.

This said, evidence is mounting that we've reached an inflection point. The wealth divide could continue contracting for years to come. It could alter the political dynamics of the nation. It could shift the nature of demand for goods and services. And it could challenge investment assumptions across asset classes. Households entered each successive recession from 1980 to 2008 with a weaker balance sheet. Following the GFC, the opposite has been true. This has major ramifications for investing and for the economy.

The bottom line

The implications of reversing inequality are too wide to cover in a single article, but there are some that stand out: 

  • The US consumer is likely to remain more resilient than the market expects.
  • Inflation may prove persistent — the US Federal Reserve is more unlikely to pivot from its interest-rate hiking plan in the short-to-medium term than the market expects.
  • Housing demand may remain strong, especially for lower-end homes.
  • Consumer spending patterns may shift, with more demand for goods and services targeting middle- and low-income consumers.
  • Governance could become even more predictive of corporate performance as management teams face complicated, consequential labor-related decisions.

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