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Sometimes inflation is a good thing

by coldwarrior ( 132 Comments › )
Filed under Economy at May 24th, 2010 - 4:00 pm

Yes, that’s right. inflation is not always a bad thing.  Lets get our macroeconomics books out here and take a look.

Inflation is a persistent increase in prices, often triggered when demand for goods is greater than the available supply or when unemployment is low and workers can command higher salaries.

Moderate inflation typically accompanies economic growth. But the US Federal Reserve Bank and central banks in other nations try to keep inflation in check by decreasing the money supply, making it more difficult to borrow and thus slowing expansion (by increasing interest rates)

Hyperinflation, when prices rise by 100% or more annually, can destroy economic, and sometimes political, stability by driving the price of necessities higher than people can afford.

Deflation, in contrast, is a widespread decline in prices that also has the potential to undermine the economy by stifling production and increasing unemployment.

Inflation is, as Milton Freidman said, always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. His point is that if there are too many dollars chasing too few goods, the price for the goods goes up (the dollar becomes worth less) conversely, he argued that deflation could be fought by dropping money out of helicopters.  Money supply creates/destroys inflation. He would say this: M x V = P x Q: M is the quantity of money in the economy, V is the velocity of money in the economy: Velocity associates the amount of economic activity associated with a given money supply, P is the general price level, and Q is the real value of final expenditures.

Inflation is also a signal that there are not enough of a certain kind of good in a market, this is a signal for more producers to enter the market to chase profit. When there is deflation, or no inflation, there is no incentive to invest in new production. SO, inflation has two components, the first is demand for goods as it relates to money supply and second the velocity in which the money is being spent. The higher the velocity, the higher the inflation; and as inflation rises so does velocity as people make purchases sooner rather than later. When there is very low velocity, there is low inflation, and low incentive to invest in new factories or hire new employees. Each factor, money supply and velocity can effect each other. If interest rates go up, the flow of money is slowed and in effect the money supply goes down.

So, without some inflation, we don’t have growth. I don’t think we are going to see any appreciable inflation in the foreseeable future because of two things. First, is that Europe and maybe the rest of us are entering a liquidity crisis. A liquidity crisis is described as this:

This is a quintessential liquidity crisis,” said William Cunningham, head of credit strategies and fixed-income research at Boston-based State Street Corp.’s investment unit, which oversees almost $2 trillion. “It’s not inconceivable to imagine a situation where the markets behave so poorly, the liquidity behaves so badly, and risk-tolerance just evaporates that — particularly in Europe — consumers contract, businesses stop hiring and stop investing, and economic activity halts.”(my emphasis)

There is a flight to quality, that is helping the debt/finance problem in the US:

The dollar has strengthened 8.74 percent this year while the euro has weakened 5.92 percent, according to Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indices. The euro dropped to $1.2144 on May 19, the lowest level since April 2006.Global purchases of U.S. equities, notes and bonds totaled $140.5 billion in March, more than double economists’ estimates, after net buying of $47.1 billion in February, the Treasury said May 17. Purchases of Treasuries rose by the most since June as China, the largest lender to the U.S., added to its holdings for the first time since September.Demand for Treasuries and dollar-based assets is helping cap borrowing costs as President Barack Obama finances the economic recovery by selling record amounts of bonds to finance a budget deficit that exceeds $1 trillion. More Americans filed applications for unemployment benefits in the week ended May 15 than economists forecast, showing firings remain elevated even as employment rises.

Second, the STRIPS (Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal Securities), and the Bond Market as a whole are back with a vengeance.  STRIPS were created to win back investors after the Fed had to raise interest rates to almost 20% to halt the 14.8% inflation in 1980.  Increase demand for Treasuries of any kind cause the interest rates (the risk premium of the note) to go down as the flight to quality continues. Higher demand for US Treasuries worldwide means lower interest rates in the US which means lower cost to finance the debt and these lower rates mean less chance for inflation.The US may have dodged a debt bullet, and this debt must be paid and spending must be brought under control or we will become Greece. Meanwhile, we may be moving to deflation as the contagion from Europe expands and economic activity stops or slows.  Anytime there is a large gain in Treasuries, that money was probably in corporate bonds and stocks. These are what companies use to buy new stuff and expand.

May 24 (Bloomberg) — Corporate bond sales are poised for their worst month in a decade, while relative yields are rising at the fastest pace since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse as the response by lawmakers to Europe’s sovereign debt crisis fails to inspire investor confidence.

In Final:

So, back to velocity on money. The crisis in Europe and the continual rise of the LIBOR pushes investors from the EU to the US, making the interest rates go down as they move to quality in the Bond Market.  This movement also increases the value of the dollar against the Euro. Increase the value of a currency and you import unemployment and export jobs. More money flowing into the Treasury from the risk in Europe(Ted Spread) makes the Treasuries look more attractive and siphons money out of the private market (its called ‘crowding out’) while the companies that actually create jobs and pay people cant expand, wont hire and the unemployment problem continues while people quit spending which causes a lack of inflation as the economy goes stagnant and looking for a hint from somewhere other that the Bond Market. The economy cant expand on FedGov Bonds.

Time to Pay the Piper: Is this the beginning of the Global Economic Contagion?

by coldwarrior ( 99 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Europe at May 2nd, 2010 - 2:00 pm

Admittedly, this is a dense post…so, take your time.

The Greek Government has agreed a billion-dollar bailout with the European Union and International Monetary Fund (IMF) but warned that the Greek public must be ready for big sacrifices.

The package will free up €120 billion (£104 billion) in aid over three years, Prime Minister George Papandreou said this morning, but will impose a freeze in public sector wages and pensions as well as tax increases.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel today said she was optimistic that the German parliament would pass legislation clearing the way for a multi-billion euro Greek bailout by Friday. May 19 is the deadline by which Greece must pay its creditors.

Earlier, German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle had a more guarded reaction. He said Germany will examine closely the agreement before deciding whether to contribute.

His cautious response reflected deep German resentment at having to rescue Greece, which manipulated its figures to join the euro zone in 2001 and has lived beyond its means ever since.

Greece’s national debt will peak at 140 per cent of output in 2013 before it starts falling in 2014. Greece and its international backers hope that the deal can stem a crisis that has shaken markets worldwide, stoked fears of contagion to other eurozone members such as Portugal and Spain, and exposed deep divisions in the 11-year-old currency bloc.

This plan has to be approved by the Germans and the Eurozone and the Greek Parliament. France holds most of the Greek debt in the EU. If IMF and Germany don’t save Greece, then France goes in the hole. Spain and Portugal are already there. If France goes, then stand back, the global contagion is on.

To remain in the EU, countries must have a given debt to gdp ratio and other parameters. These parameters are not being met, the deal is falling apart.  If the criteria gets relaxed, credibility in the markets toward the EU drops, investment will flee and the point of the EU itself becomes rather moot rather quickly.

Well, Greece is going under the IMF knife and the riots, as predicted, have begun:

MAY DAY protests in Greece turned violent yesterday as youths in gas masks and hoods set fire to vehicles, smashed shop fronts and threw molotov cocktails and rocks at police in an explosion of fury over austerity measures they claim will hurt only the poor.

Tourists were cut off from their hotels as thousands of communists, civil servants and private-sector workers converged on a main square in Athens to vent their rage at the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“No to the IMF’s junta,” they chanted as a youth in a black hood produced a hammer to try to smash windows of the luxury Grande Bretagne hotel.

Another painted anti-capitalist slogans on the facade, and demonstrators intervened to prevent him from spraying an Australian woman with paint as she tried to get back into the hotel. Japanese tourists stood taking photographs of the mayhem with mobile phones before being forced to retreat, coughing and sneezing, under a cloud of tear gas.

The violence came as negotiations were concluding between the socialist government of George Papandreou, the IMF and the EU over a multi-billion-euro rescue package for Greece.

And Spain is failing:

April 30 (Bloomberg) — Spain is lancing an 18 billion-euro ($24 billion) investment bubble in solar energy that has boosted public liabilities, choking off new projects as it works to cut power prices and insulate itself from Greece’s debt crisis.

Industry Minister Miguel Sebastian is negotiating reductions in subsidies for solar plants that would curb energy costs, a ministry spokesman said this week. Grupo T-Solar Global SA, the world’s biggest photovoltaic plant owner, shelved its Spanish stock offering three days ago. Solar Opportunities SL postponed a 130 million-euro deal due to be signed today.

“They’ve put the fear of god into all these investors,” said Paul Turney, chief executive officer of Madrid-based Solar Opportunities. “By the time they’ve finished dithering around, they’ll have hurt their credibility so badly that no one will want to invest.”

European Stocks Post Weekly Decline on Debt Concern; Banks Drop:
May 1 (Bloomberg) — European stocks posted the biggest weekly drop since February on concern that Greece’s debt crisis will spread across the region.Credit Agricole SA paced declines in bank shares. Rio Tinto Group led mining shares lower as copper prices retreated. Nobel Biocare Holding AG, the world’s largest maker of tooth implants, fell after first-quarter sales missed analyst estimates. BP Plc dropped on concern about the costs of containing a worsening oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.The Stoxx Europe 600 lost 2.8 percent to 259.91 for a third weekly decline. The benchmark gauge slipped 1.4 percent in April. Stocks fell as Standard & Poor’s downgraded the credit ratings of Greece, Portugal and Spain and investors speculated Greece’s credit troubles would spread further. The declines have trimmed this year’s gain to 2.4 percent.“What’s weighed on the market is the downgrade of Greece, renewing uncertainty,” said Chicuong Dang, an analyst at KBL Richelieu Gestion in Paris, which oversees about $4.5 billion. “Greece is in an urgent situation. The downgrades of peripheral countries also weighed on stocks. The market is asking who will be next.”S&P on April 27 lowered its ratings on Greek debt three steps to junk, while Portugal’s was cut two steps. A day later, S&P cut Spain’s rating by one step to AA.Almost $1 trillion of worldwide equity value was erased April 27, prompting German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the International Monetary Fund to step up efforts to overcome the Greek fiscal crisis.

The Greeks have until May 19 to repay their €8,500,000,000 debt in bonds or they cant borrow anymore and the country of Greece goes bankrupt (Economists have also warned that if the euro states fail to engineer a Greek bail-out to calm markets, they could end up footing a bill of €500bn). Spain and Portugal are next. As the investor confidence goes down, or risk of no repayment goes up, or the sheer amount of debt gets out of line, the bond yield goes up, the more expensive it is to borrow…this can very easily become an EU or Global Contagion.  The little countries go first, then the larger ones follow down the debt hole…America will probably have this problem soon because of our huge debt. Of course, if the Eurozone collapses, the capital flight to quality may be to buy US Bonds…just thinking out loud there…

(Here is some background in how the bond markets work. The US debt is going to be a massive issue here shortly, this debt is the single most important issue we face.)

Don’t Worry, Kid. Just Drink The Koolaid

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 238 Comments › )
Filed under Communism, Guest Post, Humor, Open thread, Political Correctness, Politics, Progressives, Socialism at March 11th, 2010 - 8:30 pm


This is an Open Thread with a Possible Topic Suggestion:“Who is the biggest paranoid boob that comes to mind first?” “What’s the biggest lie you bought into that was proven false?”

Okay, I’ll start.

The “rich” get rich by exploiting the poor, and government’s primary function is to help those who cannot help themselves by taking money from the wealthy to provide for those less fortunate in life.  I bought into this false premise (concealed under the popular mantra of  “Social Justice”) as a naive young tad growing up in the 1960s before I learned basic economics twenty years later.

NEXT

Imagine That

by tqcincinnatus ( 206 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Politics at September 21st, 2009 - 3:40 pm

Last week, as part of a post on the larger subject of the continuing economic slowdown, I made the statement,

“But consider this question – now that the government has front-loaded several months’ worth of demand into a single month, what do you think is going to happen in the months to come?  The answer – no demand for automobiles, dealers going out of business, and more layoffs of workers from idle factories.”

Hate to say it, but it looks like I was right,

It has been nearly a month since the car-buying frenzy of the Cash for Clunkers program ended, and many area auto dealers are longing for the good old days of July and August.

Like consumers nationwide, Massachusetts residents rushed to take advantage of the federal voucher program, which offered them up to $4,500 on old gas-guzzlers to be put toward the purchase of new, more fuel-efficient vehicles. About $65 million worth of vouchers were handed out statewide during the monthlong program that ended Aug. 24.

But once the federal money dried up, so did the sales rally. Now, customers at dealerships like Silko Honda in Raynham are few and far between, and inventory is once again accumulating.

Manager Adam Silverleib said business was “pretty intense’’ as a result of the federal stimulus program, with the dealership hustling to accommodate customers and handle the piles of paperwork required for them to receive reimbursement on vouchers. “Now we’re kind of back to where we were in the spring,’’ he said.

I never fail to be amazed at how other people are amazed that economic principles actually work like they’re supposed to. 

Face it, folks, the present Administration is perhaps the most immature one we have ever had.  One thing that children and other immature people are most noted for is their inability to foresee the results of their own actions.  Anyone with sense could have seen that piling several months of demand for new cars would result in a big rush while the money was flowing….followed by a massive slump once it wasn’t.  The problem is, instead of just having a low but sustained demand over the intervening months, now there’s going to be almost NO demand.  Which means everything I predicted – closed dealerships, closed factories, and people losing their jobs. 

Further, the Obama administration’s Cash for Clunkers program now makes the used car market for the lower end of America’s socio-economic ladder less friendly.  A lot of cars that otherwise would have been sold to the poor are now in some government scrap heap somewhere, and the remaining used cars will cost more because supply is lower, while demand remains the same.  The poor are not going to turn in a car, so they can buy a new one and stick themselves with a $400/month payment on it.  But they are going to have to pay more to buy a used car now, thanks to the geniuses who make up the Obama economic brain trust.

Further, as an email I received recently notes,

A vehicle at 15 mpg and 12,000 miles per year uses 800 gallons a year of gasoline.

A vehicle at 25 mpg and 12,000 miles per year uses 480 gallons a year. 

So, the average “Cash for Clunkers” transaction will reduce US gasoline consumption by 320 gallons/car per year. 

They claim 700,000 vehicles – so that’s 224 million gallons / year.

That equates to a bit over 5 million barrels of oil.

5 million barrels of oil is about ¼ of one day’s US consumption.

And, 5 million barrels of oil costs about $350 million dollars at $70/bbl.

So, we all contributed to spending $3 billion to save $350 million.

How good a deal was that???

Indeed.