Tragedy and transcendence in the search for the spiritual in nature.

“When you stop chasing the wrong things, you give the right things a chance to catch you.” ~Unknown
I might be addicted to feeling good. I’m no stranger to pleasure, and I want what I want unapologetically. But there’s a …
The post What Kept Me Stuck on My Ex and How I’m Breaking the Addiction appeared first on Tiny Buddha.
Too many business leaders think the latest marketing or sales strategies are the key to growth and building a freedom-based business. They fail to realize that all the strategies in the world won’t work without a strong mindset. The concept and idea behind developing your mindset have been relegated to cute Instagram Memes. It’s not […]
Montee Tayion Holland, President and CEO of the Tayion Collection for men, an upscale tailored men’s wearline joins Enterprise Radio.
The post Former Marine Montee Tayion Holland turns Entrepreneur, & CEO and designer of Tayion Collection for men appeared first on Enterprise Podcast Network – EPN.

Now might be a good time for the Federal Reserve to start worrying about inflation.
August’s jobs report, besides being a big disappointment on the 235,000 headline number, also showed that even with weak hiring, wages are rising.
Average hourly earnings jumped 0.6% for the month, about double what Wall Street had been expecting, and the increase from a year ago stood at a robust 4.3%, up from a 4% rise a month ago. Even leisure and hospitality, which saw zero net job growth in August, saw wages jump 1.3% for the month and 10.3% on the year.
Those numbers come as the Fed is weighing when to start pulling back on the historically easy monetary policy in place since the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. Some voices on Wall Street expect the wage and inflation numbers to start resonating with Fed officials.
“The 5.2% unemployment rate and rapidly rising wages suggest building inflationary pressure that will ultimately lead to more hawkish policy,” Citigroup economist Andrew Hollenhorst wrote in a detailed analysis of the current jobs situation.
While Fed officials mostly discuss the total payroll gains, Hollenhorst said he “would expect this rhetoric to shift a bit, perhaps at the September [Federal Open Market Committee] meeting, with more focus on the high level of job openings and increasing wages.”
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell went to great lengths in his annual speech in August during the central bank’s Jackson Hole symposium to knock down concerns about rising wage pressures as well as inflation overall, despite consistently higher numbers.
“Today we see little evidence of wage increases that might threaten excessive,” Powell said during the Aug. 27 speech. Measures Powell said he follows – he did not mention the Labor Department’s monthly average hourly earnings figure – point to “wages moving up at a pace that appears consistent with our longer-term inflation objective.”
One specific measure Powell mentioned was the Atlanta Fed’s Wage Growth Tracker.
That measure looks at wages on monthly and 12-month basis and then uses a three-month moving average to iron out distortions. On a smoothed level, the tracker is showing wages rising at a 3.7% pace, fairly consistent with the past few years. Without smoothing, the 12-month rate runs to 4.2%, which is the highest since 2007 and representative of how bumpy the data has gotten lately.
The Atlanta Fed will next update the tracker Friday, giving the Fed another look at potential pressures that could trigger a wage-price spiral, which economists consider “bad” inflation.
Fed officials thus far have attributed higher inflation numbers to supply issues. A continued rise in wages could signal that demand is becoming a factor.
“When it is difficult to disentangle demand from supply effects, price signals become more important to assess the extent of excess demand,” wrote Nomura chief economist Rob Subbaraman.
Concerns about policy
To be sure, there also is evidence that some of the issues that might spur inflation could abate ahead, particularly some of the supply chain issues Powell has cited.
The chairman also noted that unit labor costs remain low, meaning that companies still aren’t spending substantially more for productivity, which also could tamp down inflation.
“They’re taking a lot of solace in all these other factors,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “Inflation is on their radar screen, but it’s not blinking red, not even yellow.”
The rising wage numbers under most circumstances would be considered a positive.
However, the gains trailed the headline consumer price index growth of 5.4% in July and only matched the 3.6% increase when stripping out food and energy prices in July, the most recent month for which data is available.
Some central bank officials and economists worry that easy Fed policy is feeding inflation and starting to cause more harm than help. Rising home prices and high inflation expectations from consumers are fueling some of those fears.
“It is not surprising that a combination of doubling central bank assets over the past 18 months, massive fiscal stimulus, and a skill mismatch in the labor market has resulted in inflation rising to levels not seen in decades,” wrote Komal Sri-Kumar, president of Sri-Kumar Global Strategies. “Drilling a square peg into a round ole does not solve problems. It worsens it.”
Still, Zandi thinks Powell and the Fed will be content with allowing wages to rise for now.
“It’s not like they’re dismissing this as an issue. It’s a factor in their thinking about broader inflationary pressures,” he said. “But so far, they’d say the wage growth they’re observing is more a feature than a bug.”
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Every professional wants to earn a fantastic annual salary, and a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree can help you do so.
The post How to Make the Most of an MBA Degree appeared first on Enterprise Podcast Network – EPN.
According to a recent report, about 75% of all businesses are already utilizing some form of marketing automation software. However, marketing automation is often misunderstood and misapplied. So if you’re starting, it’s important to know what marketing automation really means and how the market automation process actually works in practice. Do you want digital marketing […]
The post What the Marketing Automation Process Actually Looks Like in Practice appeared first on Entrepreneurship Life.
Did you know that the fax machine was invented by a Scottish inventor, Alexander Bain, when he patented in 1843, a design for an electric telegraph transmitting images over wires? In fact, in Japan, fax machines are still used routinely by corporations and in 40-50% of Japanese households. Even though you might think that the […]
The post Mobile Faxing: Keeping Documents Private and Secure appeared first on Entrepreneurship Life.

“The time to relax is when you don’t have time for it.” ~Sydney J. Harris
No matter what airline you fly, there are safety instructions at the start of every flight that the flight crew goes over with everyone on …
The post Why Rest is the Ultimate Protective Gear in a Busy, Chaotic World appeared first on Tiny Buddha.
Professor Howard Stevenson from the Harvard Business School states, “maintaining an effective culture is so important that it, in fact, trumps even strategy.” But the question arises how to create a company culture that inspires motivation and innovation from employees? Searching for such a culture, many leave an old-school corporate environment. Therefore, it depends on […]
