part of that. and there is no easy way to fix this. of course, you could just stop the monetary stimulus, raise interest rates, you could raise taxes on middle class. that would stop it but we all know that risks a recession and so they are going to let this go and they are going to try to deal with it slowly but that means wages continue to rise. that is cost pressures, inflation expectations continue to rise. that's an incentive to negotiate even higher wages. i see the end result in consumer prices. and that's a durable inflation problem. so they really are struck right now. >> austin, this is where it does seem durable. if you are betty crocker or progresso and you get a 20% increase through, i don't know when that 20% increase is going away. it would take a lot to take it away. once they get an increase through, austin, that is pretty much permanent, isn't it? >> inflation is how much prices increase each year so if they get through and they stop increasing at 20%, inflation will have gone to zero. so, i -- i disagree with doug. i don't think he's correct that