Showing posts with label Wiemar Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wiemar Germany. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Unemployment - Truth Worse than Even Government Reports

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

Our Video Related to this Blog:

Today's weekly jobless claims came in at 573,000, well above the cut off of 400,000 level which is usually considered recessionary. The four-week moving average, which is considered more important because it is assumed that the errors in each weekly report will cancel each other out, came in at 540,500. Continuing claims, all the people who are collecting unemployment, reached 4.43 million. Both numbers are the highest level since the deep recession of 1982 when official unemployment reached double digits. The increase in people on the unemployment rolls was the biggest since 1974, another year of major recession and a major bear market.

While no one could argue that these numbers aren't bad news, the truth is actually much worse. Somewhat less than half of the American labor force is eligible for unemployment. This part of the population never shows up in the official numbers cited above. This does not mean however that you can just double all the government figures to get at the true numbers. You would have to assume that the half of the U.S. labor force not eligible for unemployment is equally likely to be unemployed as the half that is and this is certianly not true. On the other hand, it is also certainly true that the ignored half or the labor force does not have an unemployment rate of zero.

The monthly unemployment figures published by the BLS also underestimate unemployment, but do so in a different way. People who are "no longer looking for work" also known as discouraged workers are not counted. The underemployed or people who have worked even a minimal amount part-time are counted as employed. The Labor Department does publish an alternate measure of unemployment, which counts part-time workers who want full-time work, as well as anyone who has looked for work in the last year. This number which still cuts out a number of people indicates that the current U.S. unemployment rate is closer to 13%, not the 6.7% officially reported in last months employment report (almost double, but not quite).

In times of great economic calamity for developed economies, unemployment can reach a quarter of the labor force. It was estimated to be 25% at the bottom of the U.S. Great Depression in the 1930s and almost that same number during the hyperinflationary collapse in Germany in the early 1920s. If the alternative unemployment figures reach 20% or more this time around, it can safely be said that the current economic crisis has gone beyond recession and has become a depression.

NEXT: Herbert Hoover Policy - Working Just as Well Today as in the 1930s

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer,New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.









Wednesday, November 19, 2008

PPI and CPI - Don't Get Excited Just Yet

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

Our Video Related to this Blog:

Yesterday the PPI (producer price index) indicated that wholesale prices dropped 2.8% in October, the biggest one-month decline in the 60 years that this data series has been in existence. Today the CPI (consumer price index) report had consumer prices falling 1.0% last month, the biggest monthly drop in its 61 year history. One item alone, energy prices, made a disproportionate contribution to falling prices. Oil has dropped over 60% from its high in July and gasoline prices in the U.S. are down around 50% from their top the same month, having dropped an unprecedented 60 days in a row (with sharp decreases just before the election). This entire drop is still not fully reflected in PPI and CPI and is likely not yet over either, so expect further drops in both in the next couple of months.

Core inflation (inflation minus food and energy) painted a very different picture from the headline numbers however. PPI core rose 0.4% on the month. CPI core fell only 0.1%. There is also no year over year deflation either. Prices for finished producer goods have risen 5.2% in the last year and consumer prices are up 3.7%. At least these are the official numbers. The New York Investing meetup has demonstrated several times in its meetings how consumer price inflation is significantly understated by the U.S. government. Falling prices based on drops in commodity prices also have their limitations. While there is no maximum to commodity prices, there is a minimum which is determined by the cost of production. As this is approached, less efficient wells and mines are closed down. New projects are postponed. Supply falls so that profitable prices are maintained.

How does this compare to the deflation that took place in the early 1930s during the Great Depression? Estimates are that U.S. consumer prices fell approximately 3% in 1930, 9% in 1931 and 11% in 1932 (the bottom year). Production output was also falling by similar amounts during this period. Similar drops in prices and production took place in a number of countries. The one common denominator among these countries was a fixed-exchange rate gold standard and not the inherently inflationary fiat currency standards that now prevails throughout the world. Big increases in money supply, which are inflationary, are not sustainable under a gold standard, but can now take place in seconds by hitting the enter key on a computer keyboard. While the U.S. monetary authorities actually supported deflation by constricting the money supply at the beginning of the Depression, today they are doing everything possible to expand the money supply and create inflation.

Nevertheless, there are a large number of people who maintain that deflation is taking hold in the U.S and will only get worse over time. The crux of their argument is usually that bank credit is in collapse and the amount of bank credit available determines inflation or deflation (not rising or falling consumer prices, which is everyone else's definition) . They also frequently claim that inflation is led by rising wages and can't take hold otherwise. This was indeed true in the U.S during the 1970s, but apparently unbeknownst to these people, history began before that decade. Large inflations have existed since at least the Roman Empire and have taken many forms. As for Wiemar Germany, the one case of hyperinflation so far in an advanced industrial economy, there doesn't seem to have been any major increase in bank credit, which would be required in the deflationists world view. The government simply spent money it didn't have and had to keep printing more and more currency to keep up. For something like this to happen in the here and now, the U.S would have to be running larger and larger budget deficits and the national debt would have to be skyrocketing. Or in other words, exactly what is taking place.

NEXT: Market Must Hold In Here

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.







Monday, August 4, 2008

The Inflation Versus Deflation Argument - Part 3

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. In addition to the term helicopter economics, we have also coined the term, helicopternomics, to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government and to update the old-fashioned term wheelbarrow economics.

For a theory to be valid, it must produce results consistent with reality. Neither the deflationist arguments in Wiemar Germany in the 1920s, nor those made in 2008 in the United States could meet this most basic of all criteria. The contemporary U.S. deflationists are claiming that an era of lower prices is upon us even though consumer prices are continuing to rise and the rise seems to be accelerating. Both groups of deflationists redefined inflation to be something else, or in other words, they changed reality to match their theory instead of the other way around. In neither case was any relationship demonstrated by them between their definition of inflation and changes in consumer prices.

The deflationists claim that inflation is an increase in money supply plus bank credit. While everyone could agree that bank credit in the United States was falling in 2008, the same could not be said for money supply. Their are many definitions of money supply and M3, a broad category that would include the Federal Reserves newly created money pumping operations such as the TAF, TSLF and PDCF was expanding rapidly. Since the deflationist argument would fall apart using their own criteria if M3 figures were used, they chose to look at much narrower definitions of money supply such as M2 to try to support their theory. Even then, M2 was experiencing robust growth of over 6% until the second quarter of 2008, when it slowed to around 1%. This was hardly the dire collapse that the deflationists claimed to be happening.

Logically, the deflationist definition is inherently defective because it considers inflation to be a local rather than a global phenomenon. In an era with worldwide commodity trading, prices are set globally for key components of consumer inflation such as energy and food products, not based on what's happening in a single country. Under such circumstances, currency fluctuations then determine the different rates of inflation between countries.

The deflationists argument is also too limited in that it considers money supply and credit, but not assets. In a rich developed country, people can spend their wealth (liquid and tangible assets) as well and they will if they need to do so to buy necessities. This is exactly what happened in Wiemar Germany, where the middle and even upper classes sold their family's prized possessions in order to eat.

The U.S. deflationists also try to bolster their case with comparisons to what is happening in the United States now and what happened in the deflationary periods of the 1930s U.S and the 1990s Japan. Only the most superficial comparison shows any similarities between the U.S. in 2008 and these earlier time periods. Under closer examination the deflationist comparisons completely fall apart.

NEXT: The Inflation Versus Deflation Argument - Part 4


For notes related to this talk, please see, 'Inflation vs Deflation Argument' at:
http://investing.meetup.com/21/Files

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

For more about us, please see our web site: http://investing.meetup.com/21