What “Affordability” Really Means—and Why Louisiana Is at a Turning Point
“Affordability” has become one of the most talked-about issues in politics—and for good reason. Families feel squeezed. Groceries cost more. Housing is harder to find. Insurance and interest rates take a bigger bite out of every paycheck.
But affordability isn’t a slogan or a buzzword. It’s a basic economic outcome: can people buy what they need with what they earn? When incomes grow faster than prices, life gets easier. When prices grow faster than incomes, life gets harder.
Over the past few years, prices have clearly won. But the story doesn’t end there—especially in Louisiana.
How We Got Here
The affordability problem didn’t appear out of thin air. It was largely the result of government-imposed lockdowns in 2020, followed by trillions of dollars in deficit spending and unprecedented money creation by the Federal Reserve. Those policies drove the highest inflation Americans have seen since the 1970s, visible in bothCPI andPCE inflation.
Inflation has cooled since its peak, which is good news. But prices never came back down. Instead, families are living with permanently higher costs for food, energy, housing, insurance, and borrowing. Meanwhile, real average weekly earnings—what paychecks are worth after inflation—have struggled to keep up, according to earnings data on the Fed FRED website, which show they just now returned to their level in January 2021.
That gap between income and prices is what people mean when they say life feels less affordable.
Why Louisiana Feels It—and Why Things Are Improving
Louisiana didn’t cause national inflation, but state policy determines how well people can adapt to it. For years, Louisiana made that harder than it needed to be. Complex taxes, heavy regulation, slow permitting, and legal uncertainty all raised the cost of living and discouraged investment.
The good news is that policy has started to move in a better direction over the past year. Efforts to simplify taxes, reduce red tape, improve the business climate, and focus on economic growth have begun to pay off. More private investment is coming in. Job growth has improved in key sectors. The direction is finally right.
That progress matters. It shows that affordability is not fixed—and that better policy choices make a real difference. But progress doesn’t mean the job is done.
Why Affordability Still Lags
Even with improvements, affordability remains strained because supply hasn’t kept pace with higher prices. Housing is still too hard to build in many places. Energy and infrastructure projects face long delays. Insurance costs remain elevated. When supply can’t respond, prices stay high.
Political “solutions” often make this worse. Subsidies may temporarily help some households, but they usually increase demand without increasing supply, pushing prices higher. Price controls create shortages. Targeted tax credits shift costs rather than reducing them.
You can’t make things affordable by ignoring how they’re produced.
The Path Forward for Louisiana
The path to real affordability is not flashy, but it works. It’s the path the Pelican Institute has long emphasized: get government out of the way so people can respond to prices, invest, and compete.
That means continuing to lower and simplify taxes, removing barriers to housing and infrastructure development, reducing legal and regulatory uncertainty, and expanding opportunities for work and investment. These reforms don’t promise overnight relief—but they compound over time, steadily lowering costs and raising incomes.
The Big Picture
Affordability isn’t something the government can declare or subsidize into existence. It emerges when people are free to build, work, invest, and innovate—and when policy stops standing in their way.
Louisiana has made meaningful progress over the last year. That’s worth recognizing. But the affordability challenge didn’t develop overnight, and it won’t be solved overnight either.
The encouraging part is this: we know what works. And if Louisiana keeps moving in the right direction, families will feel the difference where it matters most—at the kitchen table.