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Posts Tagged ‘Inflation’

It’s Baaaaack!

by Iron Fist ( 148 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Economy, Elections, Elections 2012, Misery Index, Politics at April 5th, 2011 - 12:00 pm

Inflation, that is. Even the Washington Post recognizes this fact. What is worse, wages aren’t keeping up with inflation. People who work for a living are getting pinched:

Inflation is back, with higher prices for food and fuel hammering American consumers, and this time it really hurts.

It’s not just that prices are rising — it’s that wages aren’t.

Previous bouts of inflation have usually meant a wage-price spiral, as pay and prices chase each other ever upward. But now paychecks are falling further and further behind. In the past three months, consumer prices have been rising at a 5.7 percent annual rate while average weekly wages have barely budged, increasing at an annual rate of only 1.3 percent.

And the particular prices that are rising are for products that people encounter most frequently in their daily lives and have the least flexibility to avoid. For the most part, it’s not computers and cars that are getting more expensive, it’s gasoline, which is up 19 percent in the past year, ground beef, up 10 percent, and butter, up 23 percent.

Inflation is typically the symptom of an economy overheating. Workers can’t keep up with the demand for the vast array of things they make. Abundant dollars pursue scarce goods and services, forcing prices and wages up. The solution is simple enough: Central banks, such as the Federal Reserve, increase interest rates, applying brakes to the economy.

But the current price spike is in some ways more pernicious than the last great U.S. inflation — the steep increases of the 1970s — and harder for policymakers to address. Today, raising interest rates might make a weak economy even weaker, stifling what meager growth there has been in wages. Moreover, higher interest would make the nation’s massive budget deficits even more expensive to finance, taking an additional toll on the economy.

Few would argue that the U.S. economy, with its 8.9 percent unemployment rate, is overheating at the moment. Rather, the global economy — in particular developing nations such as China and India — is growing so rapidly that it’s straining the available supplies of all types of raw materials.

What he doesn’t mention is that QE2 has made the dollar worth less than it was bu essentially printing $600 billion dollars. That is a direct responsibility of Obama Administration policy. So when they throw their hands in the air and say there is nothing that they can fo, remember that they have already made things considerably worse. QE2, the “Stimulus”, and so forth have brought us to the Obama Economy. High unemployment, rising prices, stagnant wages, it is time to bring back the Misery Index. That should be a central theme of the coming election. Things are cnosiderably worse than they were four years ago. The Republicans need to drive that home. The Obama Administration is already a failed Administration. It has failed on all fronts. We need to drive this home so that it is a one-term failed Administration. We need to stop Obama from getting four more years to really drive us into the ditch.

Obama Boom: Consumer Confidence drops in March

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Headlines, Misery Index at March 29th, 2011 - 5:30 pm

The historic Obama Boom continues to roar! The greatest economic expansion since the death of Genghis Khan, continues to produce dazzling results. Consumer confidence fell sharply in March due to increasing inflationary pressures. As the cost of food and fuel continues to rise, people’s incomes are not. This is leading to people cut back spending as prices rise for basic necessities.

NEW YORK, March 29 (UPI) — U.S. consumer confidence dropped in March after two months of gains, the Conference Board said Tuesday.

The monthly Consumer Confidence Index, which uses 1985 as a base year with an assigned value of 100, fell from 72 in February to 63.4 in March. The Expectations Index, measuring consumer confidence in the economy six months down the road, fell from 97.5 a month ago to 81.1.

The greatest economy in the history of humanity continues to boom!

First the Obama Boom, Then The Deluge

by Iron Fist ( 164 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Politics at January 10th, 2011 - 8:30 am

It seems that there is no real good news on the economy today. The spinmeisters spin, but the raw truth is that we are in a place of pain like the Country has only seen once before. That once before being the Great Depression. And Ben Bernanke says that this is going to last at least another five years. That doesn’t include the massive and on-going loss of wealth in the housing market. That won’t recover in another ten years, at least. Most likely, that won’t recover ever.

The bright spot in the economy, if it can be said to have a bright spot, is that there has been little inflation seen. Yet. And it is that “yet” that is troubling to me. Inflation is a thief that robs the rich and poor alike. And it may be returning with a vengance. Consider the following:

The international monetary system set up at Bretton Woods in 1944 is on the verge of breaking down. It could still be saved by heroic measures, especially if these were taken in the United States. They would include an immediate slash in projected government expenditures, an immediate balancing of the budget, and a halt in any further increase in the stock of money.

But in the present political and ideological atmosphere, these measures are very unlikely.

Parallel measures are even more unlikely in Britain or in France. The government in Britain will never give up its socialistic obsessions. In France, Nicolas Sarkozy is caught in a chronic dilemma of either yielding to untenable wage demands or having his country paralyzed by strikes.

And nearly every other country, in varying degree, now operates on the fixed assumption that at least some inflation, some constant increase in its stock of paper money, is necessary to prevent an economic slowdown or setback.

The four paragraphs above–substituting “Charles de Gaulle” for “Sarkozy” and adding “Labor” before “government in Britain”–appeared at the beginning of a Los Angeles Times editorial written by Henry Hazlitt in March of 1969. The editorial concluded that the U.S. was certain to leave the gold standard and commence an inflationary devaluation, with resulting economic chaos.

Two years later, President Nixon appeared on national television to “suspend temporarily the convertibility of the dollar into gold.” The second part of Hazlitt’s prediction took longer to manifest itself. In fact, the inflation rate as measured by the Consumer Price Index sank from 5.2% when Hazlitt wrote the editorial to 2.7% in 1972. Initially it seemed Nixon was correct that suspending convertibility would paradoxically “protect the position of the American dollar.” A speculator betting on inflation 1969 would have gone broke.

Source

That sounds like good news! No inflation then equals no inflation now, right? Not so fast. Remember the wonderful economic times in the ’70s?

But what Hazlitt knew, and Nixon didn’t, is that inflation has great momentum. The price level can withstand significant monetary abuse, but once inflationary expectations cement they are impossible to dislodge without extreme economic and political pain, as Ford, Carter, and Reagan soon discovered.

The similarities between then and now are obvious. Despite the Republican takeover in the House, there is no chance of restraint at the Fed or a balanced budget. The tax deal passed in the lame-duck session will add nearly $1 trillion in deficits, most of which the Fed will be forced to monetize.

Although the Conservatives have gained power in Britain, their “austerity” plan is to return spending back to 2007 levels–in terms of projected GDP. Nominal spending is set to increase. Meanwhile, France continues to have strikes, as do Britain, Ireland, Italy and Greece.

The inflation rate has fallen for the past three years, as it did between 1969 and 1972, but monetary policy has caused commodity prices to surge back to 2008 bubble highs despite rising unemployment. Anecdotal evidence of pricing turmoil for foreign producers of intermediate goods suggests that inflation is already lurking just offshore, preparing to crash into the economy. The higher costs will cause commerce to freeze, as it did in 2008, or else the inflation spiral will again begin in earnest. Either way, European-style protests will soon come to these shores as well.

There’s my sunshine! This puts into words my personal economic fears. I am not an economist, but I see danger signs all around me. The center falls apart, the edges cannot hold. Our current level of spending is clearly unsustainable, but where will the cuts come from? Defense? That is unwise. But as we have seen in Europe, the people on the paying end of “entitlements” will not simply take it when those “entitlements” stop being paid. Riots in America like in Greece are entirely possible when the parasite class begins to feel the pain.

What can be done? On a macro level, I am not sure that Anything can be done. The Republican House can propose, but Harry Reid’s Senate has already promised to dispose of anything positive that the Republicans accomplish in the House. We are in for two years of gridlock in the Legislature, which is far better than two more years of the Pelosie-Reid-Obama spending machine that has put us so deep in this hole. On a macro level it may be that nothing can be done, but on a personal level we can prepare:

In the current cycle, the dollar and the Dow began deflating in 1999. With gold at $1,400 and oil at $90, the dollar and the Dow have declined by nearly 80% against both. To match the 1970s, they would have to lose another 80% against gold and another 60% against oil, implying gold at $7,000 and oil over $200. Given that the current monetary abuse is far worse than in the 1960s and 1970s, these figures are conservative.

Bretton Woods II is collapsing. The seductive Keynesian policies that fiscal and monetary authorities have followed for decades will soon cause the end of dollar hegemony. The United States is entering its third consecutive year of deficits greater than $1 trillion coupled with continuing dramatic increases in the stock of money. Devaluation and economic chaos are guaranteed, just as they were in 1969. Fortunately, unlike in 1969, gold ownership is legal. Those who understand free markets can still preserve the capital that will be needed to restore American prosperity after the deluge.

Please note, both of the articles referenced in this piece are in Forbes Magazine, hardly an apocalyptic conspiracy-based publication. With anything, consider the source, and I’d say the source on this is as good as you can get in tthe financial world. After the Obama Boom, the deluge is coming. Inflation, perhaps even hyper-inflation is probably just around the corner. Bernanke is monetizing debt to the tune of $600 billion and simply hoping that the “great momentum” of inflation stays in check. That seems unlikely in the medium and long term, but then the current leadership doesn’t appear to think much beyond the next 24-hour news cycle, so truly long term thinking is not to be expected.

“Try DOME GAS – It’s Better”

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 97 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, History, Humor, Open thread at June 16th, 2010 - 10:00 pm

[Originally posted here, 12 July 2009, but not entirely out of date. Click on the image for a larger view.]
Dome Gas 1926_Strange Cosmos 090710

WHOA! 23¢ a gallon! And what a GREAT slogan.

Let’s talk about gas prices vs. inflation.
Inflation calculator: 1926-2009 = 1,108.2%

Price per Gallon in 1926 (regular, leaded): $0.23/gal
Federal Gasoline Tax (up to 1933): $0.01/gal = 4.55%
Actual cost per gallon (1926 dollars): $0.22/gal
Actual cost per gallon, less taxes (2009 dollars): $2.66/gal

Price per Gallon (regular unleaded) 10 July 2009: $2.90/gal
Federal Gasoline Tax 2009: $0.184/gal
California (Local + State + Fed Taxes) 6 July 2009:
$0.645/gal* = 2.9%

* Includes CA Sales Tax (7.25%) CA County & Local Sales Tax (1.25%), and UST tax (1.2%) whateverTF that is.

Actual cost per gallon, less taxes (July 2009): $2.26/gal**

**Note that the base price stated for California gasoline includes costs for state mandated fuel additives, summer/winter mixes, ethanol. Note also that this amount includes franchise fees, business license fees, miniscule profit by the small business folks, and Swantzenegger Boxer Feinswein Pelosi & Waxman fees, other “revenue enhancement fees” emanating from Sacramento, and costs for gettin’ the lead out.

[Sources found here and here.]

Now Let’s talk about mileage and cost and technology.

MILEAGE & COST

Say you’re in Washington D.C. and you want to drive to Little Rock Arkansas to have a chat with a former President at his library, Bubba’s Books. It’s a little over 1,000 miles away. Let’s also assume that all the roads are paved and level; no mountain passes or dirt roads to take. Lookee here.

1926 Model T

1926 Ford Model T (1909-1927)

When production of the Model T began, the cost was around $850, around $1200 less than most cars. By the early 1920’s, the price of the Model T cost about $300.

(Cost $300 in 1920 dollars = $3,207 in 2009 dollars.)

22hp engine, no a/c, no electrical appurtenances, manual windshield wipers, manual crank start (risking a broken arm):
Top speed (level paved road): 30 mph
Gas mileage: 13-21 mpg
1K miles @ 30 mph (excluding stops): 1 day 9 hours 20 minutes.

Trip Cost in 2009 dollars:
1,ooo mi./21 mpg x ($2.66+$0.645 taxes)/gal = $157.62

2009 Ford Escape

 

2009 Ford Escape SUV – $20,515 (basic)

171 hp engine, electronic ignition, emission controls, a/c, electrical appurtenances, safety equipment;
Top speed: 100+? mph
Gas mileage: 20-28 mpg
1K miles @ 65 mph (excluding stops): 15 hours 23 minutes.

Trip Cost in 2009 dollars:
1,000 mi./24mpg x $2.90/gal (incl. taxes) = $120.83

Cool. 83 years later, a 1,000 mile roadtrip in an evil gas-hoggin’ SUV takes less than half the time and costs almost $40 less. Is this a Great Nation or what?

We have cheaper gasoline than at the dawn of the automotive era, and we’re able to drive farther, faster and more efficiently than ever. So what did Our President have to say about it?

Obama, touring a California electric car plant on Thursday, said, “The 1908 Model T _ think about this _ the 1908 Model T earned better gas mileage than the typical SUV in 2008… Think about that: 100 years later, and we’re getting worse gas mileage, not better, on SUVs,” Obama said.

Complete apples/basketballs non-sequitur.

Yeah it’s an Obama story that’s only 4 months old as of this post. My point is that gasoline is cheaper and of better quality now, and that automobiles are cheaper, more efficient, and safer than they’ve ever been in the history of the industry.

Wanna make gasoline EVEN cheaper, reduce oil imports, and employ more workers and give REAL stimulus to the US economy?

Let’s compete with OPEC by drilling in ANWR, the Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic & Pacific Oceans, and refurbish and build more refineries. Then we can buy PEMEX, too, and help resolve some of Mexico’s financial problems.

It’s my opinion and it’s very very true.