Archive for the ‘economics’ Category

Inflation comes roaring back

Monday, October 5th, 2009

People who argue for “stimulus”, or more “stimulus”, often correctly point out that no one doubts that government can increase nominal GDP.   Zimbabwe and Weimar Germany are excellent examples of government rapidly increasing nominal GDP.  The question is, can government spending, particularly government spending on favored individuals and groups cozy with the government, increase useful employment, create real jobs that produce real value, create jobs where people work to produce what other people want and care about?

The cpi supposedly rose 0.4% in august – by about the same amount as employment declined. 0.4% a month, if continued, is 5% a year, and the real inflation is probably considerably higher than that.  Shadow statistics claims that the cpi calculation has undergone greater and greater adjustment since 1990, and if calculated by 1990 methods would now be showing an inflation rate 3.5 percent per year higher – which implies that present inflation, if continued would be over eight percent a year.

Five percent inflation per year is apt to have unpleasant and disturbing side effects.  Ten percent inflation is apt to have serious and gravely damaging effects, and we are heading towards ten percent.  The MSM reported the 0.4 monthly result as

underscoring the Federal Reserve’s view that inflation will be contained.

A lack of inflation will probably give Fed policy makers leeway to keep interest rates near zero in the foreseeable future to secure a recovery.

“What we’re seeing is a gradual disinflation that reflects the persistent slack in our economy,”

It is a bizarre thing to say.  If they say that for 0.4% per month, they will probably say the same for 4% per month, 30% per month, 10% per day, 100% per day, 100% per hour – which is pretty much what the German mainstream media was saying during the Weimar hyperinflation – that there was no inflation, that the problem was insufficient money in circulation and the government needed to issue lots more money to stimulate the economy, and that Jews and Anglo Saxons were causing the inflation.

When the inflation rate and the unemployment rate are similar, in that both of them are disturbingly high and rising fast, the government should be looking for solutions to both – in other words, supply side solutions – cutting taxes, spending, and regulation.

If, as seems likely, inflation becomes undeniable, expect the regular announcements that inflation is not a problem to be mixed with regular announcements that “price gougers” are a problem, doubtless due to Bush’s dreadful deregulation.  More regulation, by the wise and good regulators, who are on the side of the consumer, will doubtless be needed.

Delong’s solution

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Brad DeLong, an economist greatly respected by the Cathedral, thinks the government is not blowing enough money.

He presents a graph predicting, plausibly enough, that unemployment is going to stay high for a long time. So, he concludes the benevolent government should put those people to work – without, however, worrying as to what they will be doing, forgetting that people should work to produce the particular goods and services that other people want, or perhaps confidently believing that the wise folk of the government have lots of useful work for idle people to do, forgetting that a large part of the unemployed are unemployed because they were producing things, such as financial services or housing for non asian minorities, that the recipients are demonstrably unwilling to pay for.

His conclusion will doubtless further improve his immense status with the rest of the Cathedral, whereas were he to doubt the capability of fellow Cathedral members to put the lower orders to useful work this would with equal swiftness diminish that status

The improbable economic growth of Argentina.

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Over the last hundred years or so, Argentina as swung violently, and with increasing frequency, between policies of on the one hand constitutionalism, rule of law, and the free market, and on the other hand populism, bureaucratic decree, and national socialism.  It has also swung violently between being one of the wealthiest countries in the world, and being a typical third world poverty stricken hellhole.

After the last crisis, it swung violently towards national socialism, populism, and bureaucratic decree – and yet is reportedly experiencing tremendous economic growth, greatly reduced poverty, vastly improved equality, social justice, public health, great medical care, and so on and so forth.  And everyone is reportedly happy and loves the government for its wise, good, and successful policies.

Reported real growth in GDP is 8%pa.  Reported inflation was 3.6%pa. 

Actual inflation was 21.6%pa, which would mean real growth was something like 8%+3.6%-21.6%, which is negative ten percent per annum, a massive economic shrinkage, at which rate they will be back to third word hell hole mighty fast.

Now that we are hearing less of the wonderful health care of Cuba, we will probably be hearing more of the wonderful economic growth of Argentina.

Losing in Afghanistan 3

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Aid Watch says:

every sensible economist, political scientist, development worker, and journalist that I know thinks our current course in Afghanistan can have only one outcome — disaster.

Michael Yon tells us we are at war with pretty much the entire Pashtun population.

Global Guerrillas tells us

you can’t change a society through changes in governance or targeted force in any time period of relevance, and if you do try, you will spend yourself into the ground and generate widespread opposition.

The current program is to make Pashtuns into progressive democratic liberals in Washington’s own image. This will fail, and should fail. Pashtuns need to be defeated, not morally uplifted.

American debt

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

Total federal debt twelve trillion

That is not too alarming in itself. It is a bit less than GDP, and for most countries, trouble ensue when debt is around twice GDP. The liberty papers are not too worried.

Total American indebtedness (public and “private”) is sixty trillion, which is much larger than federal debt, and has been rising very rapidly. The primary cause of this rise has been implicit and explicit governmental and quasi governmental guarantees – FHA guarantees, debt of too-big-to-fail corporations, guarantees by too-big-to-fail corporations, state debt, for example California, and so on and so forth.

Some substantial part of this sixty trillion is secured by real assets such as houses and the income stream of hard working people, and some substantial part is not.

Thus the excess “private” debt is not private.  The normal level of public and “private” debt is about twice GDP, say twenty six trillion, so we are about thirty trillion or so in the hole and getting deeper fast – well past the danger level of twice GDP.

US turning french

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Number of weeks needed to find a new job

Number of weeks needed to find a new job

It is getting steadily harder and harder for someone to find a new job – and having found a new job, harder and harder to afford a house – presumably because of the very great and rapidly increasing regulatory burden on building houses and hiring people.

This renders employees powerless before their employers, which tends to result in class war and social violence as in France, and tends to result in greater regulator burdens.

“There is no axis of evil”

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

UAE seizes ship full of North Korean weapons bound for Iran.

These weapons would have been used to kill Americans in Iraq.  One might wonder what Americans are doing in Iraq, but perhaps one should wonder rather more why the UAE is snatching these weapons and not the Unites States Marines.

Hat tip Hot Air

I often complain there are no moderate Muslims.  That is not true.  His Highness Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, ruler of Dubai, the UAE King that snatched those weapons, is a moderate Muslim.  The US government however tends to sponsor raging anti Semites and sponsors of terrorism like the Saudi rulers.

Who funds terrorism?

We do, through such intermediaries as the Saudis.

The cause of the crisis 4

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

I have issued a bunch of posts, each titled the “the cause of the crisis”, and each giving a different cause – but each of these causes was itself caused by, or caused, all of the other causes.

This post addresses  ratings for debt. (more…)

Prospects of hyperinflation

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Arnold Kling thinks that “hyperinflation would be political suicide” and that therefore that the US government will sooner or later do the extraordinary and drastic things necessary to avoid it.

Even if it was political suicide, this is like arguing that someone will lose weight because his morbid obesity is about to kill him – but it is not political suicide.  Incumbents that engage in hyperinflation usually gain political benefit in the short run, and the short run is all they care about.  The Weimar government was not punished at the polls. (more…)

Goldfellas

Monday, August 24th, 2009

This is a spoof of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein memo warning employees to avoid making big-ticket, high-profile purchases