Thoughts:
1) I'm hearing a lot less talk about people's "FIRE number" and early retirement in general. That's because our costs have risen so fast over the past 3 years that our 25X or 28X FIRE numbers are rising at a pace that is faster than even the most hardass Mustachian can save. E.g. if your household spent $40k per year a couple years ago, and your expenses have risen 20% since then, your 25X FIRE number just went from $1M to $1.2M. If you kicked absolute ass and managed to sock away $200,000 in the past 3 years, then you only managed to keep up. The path to FIRE is exactly as far away as it was 3 years ago, and that's demoralizing. See the "treading water" thread.
2) The Fed will eventually be successful at getting wage inflation down, but it could take "higher for longer" interest rates to keep inflation down. That is to say, the neutral rate of interest, at which inflation stays steady in the ideal range around 2%, is probably higher now than it was in the 20-teens when inflation failed to rise despite a 0.25% federal funds rate. Maybe it's now 4-5%? The neutral rate could stay higher for another decade, and the Fed might keep rates high for a long time to ensure inflation is actually dead and we don't repeat the 1970s yoyo experience. This means stocks, long-duration bonds, and RE may be overpriced. Perhaps instead of chasing these things - which everybody is talking about - we should be jumping on the opportunity to earn positive real interest rates in safer instruments for the first time in many years.
3) The bright side is we no longer have to gamble on the timing of our retirements to reliably replace our incomes. To me, this really feels like a time when "don't lose money" is a bigger goal than chasing riskier returns. Annuities paying out 6.2% are something to seriously consider. Also, we might need to rethink the 4% rule and our ideas of optimal asset allocation in a world where the positive real returns from fixed income challenge the real returns we expect from stocks.
4) Times of rapid inflation are also times when it does not pay to stick with one employer. Job hoppers are capturing almost all the gains from wage inflation, while many employers (mine included!) have not been willing or able to keep up. If you are feeling squeezed between rising costs and stagnant wages, now is the time to dust off the resume.
5) People are comparing the union workers obtaining large multi-year contracts with their own annual raises. Actually the union workers are locking in their pay for the next several years with these contracts, and the news sites quoting numbers are often reporting the highest wage that will be available at the end of the contract, not now. So a 20% raise doesn't mean as much if it's over 5 years. Do you hope to be earning 20% more in 5 years? That would only be an increase of 4.6% per year. Also not reported is the fact that their last multi-year contract probably didn't anticipate a sudden outbreak of inflation, and so the workers' wages have not been keeping up with inflation for a long time now. Their employers were able to raise prices while the union workers had to wait for their next contract negotiation opportunity. Additionally, the wages for drivers and train crews and airline pilots are often for jobs that require constant overnight travel, long hours, and significant risk of bodily harm or disability. Quite frankly, these jobs are not comparable to the work done by an office analyst, customer service rep, or administrative supervisor. One reason these jobs are unionized is because they are so hard that workers demand additional wages.
6) Decisions to fix costs such as by owning one's home or buying solar panels are looking good in a world of inflation risk. These reduce the inflation exposure of one's annual spending. My solar panels only yield about 6% against the cost of their 2022 installation, and my 3.25%-mortgaged home is a maintenance pit, but without them I'd have to worry about rising electricity costs, housing costs, and rents. Similary, a WFH job can insulate a person from rising automotive and fuel expenses, and a habit of NOT eating at restaurants can knock one of the fastest inflation growth categories out of one's budget. I'd be interested to hear about it if anyone can think of more opportunities to lock in a future cost.