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Investors Pray for Inflation

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When an unexpected outage on the north slope of Alaska can drive crude oil prices to nearly $78/barrel - you know the world is awash in dollars. The effects of a dollar glut are seen in Lebanon where Hezbollah has fielded a sophisticated light infantry force capable of inflicting painful fatalities on Israel's army, while still maintaining its terror blitz of missiles - all supplied by Iran's oil money.

In this environment, investors are betting that Ben Bernanke will prove to be soft on inflation. After all corporate profits are growing at double digit rates, they aren't paying the inflation tax, or the stagnation tax.

It sets the stage for the first decisive moment of Bernanke's tenure.

While all political junkies are looking to Connecticut, where challenger Ned Lamont holds a slender lead over Joe Lieberman - the Lamont campaign never believed the more optimistic polls, and has been mounting a 24x7 call for help in getting the vote out, even as Lieberman has pulled resources out of his GOTV operation - the world of money is concerned about a different number - namely, the decision by Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve on interest rates this week.

To tell the story: the Federal Reserve is the US central bank, it sets how easy it is, and how cheap it is, for banks to lend money, it is by lending money that banks create money, and the money supply increases. Thus the Federal Reserve's impact on the economy is indirect, and takes time to act. This is the trade off - fiscal stimulus can work quickly, but some of it is eaten up by inefficiencies - monetary stimulus works slowly, but reaches a more efficient equilibrium. Well, that's the theory any way, but what I know is America under a guy from Texas, and out here, you on yo own.

The reality is that that the Federal Reserve makes the economy do more of whatever it is wanted to do. If the barrier to productivity is simply lack of money, or the cause of inflation is simply an excess of it, the Federal Reserve is very good at either increasing economic activity or damping down inflation. However, if the problem is that the economy has made poor decisions on aggregate - particularly the largest single player in the economy, the Federal Government - then the Federal Reserve can mask, but not remove, structural problems.

But investors, particularly large investors, don't really care about the long term health of the economy, they care about what they pay for money, and what they get back when they invest. Since 1999, US equities have been essentially flat in real terms - and there is very little that investors can do about this, except exercise shareholder activism and change management. But it isn't clear that there is better management waiting in the wings, and most shareholders, locked in side pension funds and mutual funds, can't vote anyway. Most shareholder activism comes from private equity firms, hedge funds, and very large investors who can make the splash of a hippo off a diving board.

Thus, like most people who can't change what the private sector is doing, investors turn to the government, and hope that it will make their lives easier. Those who can, do, those who can't, lobby.

When, in the face of deflation and a federal stimulus package which was ineptly designed and wastefully executed, the Federal Reserve set its policy to "accomodative" and dropped its benchmark rate to 1% - it helped touch off a secondary bubble in housing. In retrospect economists realize this. Some of us were saying "secondary bubble" as early as 2002 - predicting that housing would be used to offset the effects of a stock market crash. There have been many examples of secondary bubbles, including one in the early 20th century which was the ultimate stimulus for the Income Tax amendment and the Federal Reserve itself.

The Fed took the economy into uncharted territory - and along with the Bank of Japan's zero interest rate policy - the BoJ was, in effect, giving money away - it created a huge flood of hard currency which has driven up commodity prices, stock prices and housing prices, not just in the US.

Then the Fed changed course, and began, in very tiny baby steps, to raise interest rates - but one quarter of one percentage point - that is "25 basis points" in econ-speak where a "basis point" is .01% - at each of 17 consecutive meetings. This foot dragging rate of increase was driven by a desire to produce what is known in economics as "a soft landing". A soft landing is when the economy nearly slows to a stop, but doesn't quite, and this slowing is enough to reduce inflationary pressures. In economic history soft landings are rare. The close cousin of the soft landing is the hard landing - an example of this being 1986, when unemployment went up, GDP fell for the total year, but the decline was never sustained enough, or broad enough, to quite drive the economy into recession. The reverberations of that hard landing caused the 1987 stock market crash, touched off the Japanese "Bright Depression" of 1988-2004, and the Savings and Loan Bail out, the most expensive bank bail out in the history of mankind.

This historical reality, however, is not the most important factor which has Bernanke caught in a riptide. the US is out of step with the BoE's assessment of monetary conditions - and even observers who are very friendly to Bernanke's argument that the US economy is going to slow enough to squeeze out the inflation that the Fed cares about - wage inflation - are calling for a firm move on the part of the Fed to renew its inflation fighting credentials. This is because one of the drivers of inflation is believed to be inflationary expectations. People begin buying now rather than buying later, out of the fear that later prices will have risen.

Adding to the pressure to raise rates - aside from inflation that, if it is not out of control, is certainly out of hand - is another factor. Persistent high budget deficits - pay no attention to the headline Federal Budget Deficit, because that number only exists in the never never land where the US isn't involved in Iraq, because war costs are off budget - means that the US must keep issuing bonds. Until recently when one could borrow money from the BoJ for nothing, buy US bonds and make a profit on the world's ultimate carry trade, central banks and others were willing to hold dollars. For over a year and a half, these same big investors have been unwinding their bond positions, and it has gotten to a worrisome pace.

So, on one hand, inflation data, oil prices, federal borrowing and the dollar dump are pressuring Bernanke to continue raising until the corner on inflation and the fed has offset the stimulus from federal deficit spending. This would make a rate raise a sure thing if let to itself - since 2.5% GDP growth would normally mean that there was plenty of room for a more restrictive monetary policy.

However, there is another hand, and that is that is the political reality that the present government regime is wildly unpopular - just touching 40% approval in the best polls, and having spent virtually the entirety of 2006 wallowing in the 30's. While the US has been growing rapidly, all of that growth has gone into corporate profits. Real wages are falling. There is also the glaring problem that while housing, which has driven private employment in the US, is cooling - business spending, sitting on large mountains of cash though many US companies are, has not picked up.

Here Bernanke is caught in the tax trap. Everyone knows that current US tax rates are unsustainably low. Hence companies have every incentive to profitize everything they can, but no incentive to spend, since this will not decrease their tax burden by as much. Instead better to hold and buy back shares or hand out dividends, which make executives and big shareholders happy, but don't generate much in the way of employment. Thus business are clamouring for the free ride to continue, inflation be damned, while tax rates are low.

And the markets expect to get their way - the futures market, which bets on which way rates are going to go - thinks there is less than a 20% chance that Bernanke will raise, and no raise is priced into US stocks. The last thing that a partisan Fed chief wants is a stock market tumble before an election. And he has some cover - recession worries are now sprouting like overnight mushrooms. Bernanke can argue that the risks in the economy are now tilted to stagnation more than recession.

Even though the inflation is here, and the recession is not.

Objectively speaking what this economy needs is a good tax increase, so that the Federal government could put money back to work - in say rebuilding Katrina, converting the US energy infrastructure, bailing out a trouble pension system before it becomes catastrophically unravelled and converting to single payer healt care - but the reality is that Bush isn't competent to rebuild a Iraq, let alone the US.

However, the Fed has no real influence over fiscal policy - even if Greenspan from time to time proved that he might have been the best central banker in history, he was clearly one of the worst senators by pushing for budget busting revenue reductions - and must make its decisions, not based on what the Federal government ought to be doing - pursuing fiscal sanity - but on what it is likely to do. While there have been noises out of Washington that it will slash benefits, medicare and other programs that help ordinary people, the Fed has heard this before from Bush - in 2004 when Social Security Privatization was supposed to be the top priority for the second term.

The reality that Bernanke and the other Fed governors have to face is that Bush is no more capable of making tough decisions than the central bank has been, and the rest of the world will believe that the Gop has relearned the joys of austerity when they see concrete signs. After all, with a working majority in both houses of Congress, a friendly supreme court and control of the Presidency backed by a media that has been willing to lie to cover up mistakes, blunders and crimes - what better environment for taking big steps to end the New Deal will there be? If a powerful war time President can't alter the direction of the government, no one can.

For those of us who have been critical of Ben Bernanke - and I warned people in 2001 that he was the next Fed chief and that he was a conservative inflationist - this meeting is his last chance to prove us wrong - a 50 basis point increase in the discount rate and overnight rate, coupled with other tightening moves such as increasing reserve requirements and using the Federal Reserve's moral authority to announce that inflation must remain dead - would quiet critics. However, the overwhelming likelihood is that the party in power, like all parties in power that have run out of ideas and run out of political courage and political capital - is going to favor the inflation tax that is falling on people who don't vote for them, over a recession which will also afflict people who do vote for them.

The ball is, however, in Ben's court.


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Real demand for raw materials is increasing and this must be having some effect of prices. The rise of economic activity in China is one of the major factors.

We have entered the era of scarcity and the economic models don't exist to deal with it. A simple example, China is planning to build new urban housing for 400,000,000 people in the next decade. This is equivalent to replacing all the housing in the US in seven years. Where are they going to get all the concrete and steet for this project? How about the increase in road, water, sewage and electrical transmission that will be required?

Then there are the issues of water and arable land. China is already depleting their water table and suffering from desertification. In the US southwest a similar pattern has emerged.

Monetary policy can't deal with global issues of this nature. As long as every central government is dedicated to "growth" things will only continue to get worse. There needs to be a new paradigm based upon steady-state economics, where the amount consumed is the amount that can be replenished. Aside from a few marginal economists like Herman Daly, these discussions are just not taking place.

--- Policies not Politics
Daily Landscape

Models do handle this, they just don't point to favorable outcomes for either the Democratic establishment or the Republican leadership to maintain the present course of robbing developed world workers to pay for a repeated series of stock bubbles.

Stirling Newberry http://www.bopnews.com

Can you cite some studies/models/reports that deal with a non-growth goal or with the conflict between increasing demand (due to economic growth and population expansion) and limited or declining raw materials?

Something that can be understood by mere mortals would be most helpful. All I've seen are people like Daly who can explain what is wrong, but come up short when it comes to specific implementation plans.

--- Policies not Politics
Daily Landscape

I'm not sure rebuilding Katrina would be a good idea (!)

You have a great point in that FDR type national rebuilding project might pay off big - not just in "make work" but in creating more efficient infrastructure to aid interstate commerce and eliminate the health care money pit with universal single payer plans. Even European cell phones are light years ahead of what we have.

But seriously, it's not exactly a shock that "haters" of "big government" do such a terrible job of implementing epic scale policies.

Social Security was a perfect example. Elite conservatives were trying to completely remake the US into a "saver society," but because of their natural tendency toward shell games and literal swindle schemes, they couldn't get traction. The way swindlers just can't keep their stories straight - think of all the double talk about "personal" vs. "private." They should have just gone with "Tits and ass accounts."

Social Security has a very simple premise - part of what makes it so successful. But when Bush starts talking about taking out annuities and how you actually don't take "your" money out at retirement but borrow against it - it was like America just collectively rolled its eyes. Then there was that little matter of hefty "fees" that would all be going to Wall Street - just for looking cute apparently because they would not be advising us, merely punching our requests into a computer. Goodie.

Iraq seems to be another area where grand plans were to be implemented, but the GOP had this sort of mirror image of Marxist dogma to "enforce." No more civil service and army for YOU Iraq. No more centralized bureacracy either - "home rule" is how my young Republican operatives roll. They were caught up in the metaphysics of what the "natural" state of man and his economy is - counting angels dancing on pinheads rather than just keeping it simple and pragmatic.

Then they wonder why the country splinters apart - as if major national institutions are completely unimportant.

Re: Even European cell phones are light years ahead of what we have.


If that's true then why aren't they flying of the shelves over here? ("Build a better mousetrap...") Sure, Nokia is popular (no doubt deservedly so) but it hasn't put the others out of bnusiness and doesn't look likely to.

The lack of a network that can support the advanced features.

Or did that really need to be pointed out?

Stirling Newberry http://www.bopnews.com

What advanced features? A friend has a cell phone that is basically a small computer. He can web browse, etc. any time any where (and does, which is very annoying when he is driving). What else do European cell phones do-- are they provided with psychic powers too?

One really nice feature is cost. It is less expensive for me to call from Taiwan to the US on my cellphone, than it is for me to call there even with the cheapest US calling card.

Another example is the roll out of EVDO, only recently available in the US, it was available in South Korea two years ago... and now South Korea has a better mobile modem standard working, which is only slowly being rolled out here.

Unlocked phones.

You know all that "watch tv" stuff that is just being sold here in the last 6 months. It's cliche over there.

I also note your reading comprehension is low - I specifically noted the problem was the network.

Are you paid for being a troll? Or are you stupid enough to do other people's work for free?

Stirling Newberry http://www.bopnews.com

My main complaint with current foreign policy is that it seems best suited to creating enemies intsead of friends.

My only complaint with your writing is your harsh attacks on quibblers; certainly it strains debate ettiquette.

JP is the one being rude, he's insulting people's intelligence. And at this point, so are you.

I've been warned about both of you as two of the well known trolls on the site.

Stirling Newberry http://www.bopnews.com

So once someone is perceived as rude by the other, the respondent is justified in attack?

There is a proper answer to the cellphone issue, which you gave, but then you fired the first shot---"Are you paid for being a troll? Or are you stupid enough to do other people's work for free?" Shall we start a thread and see what others here think about this exchange? JP was being at worst, testy. You made the first overt insult.

Kind of flattering to think I'm noticed, but I'm pretty sure I have a solid record here. It is odd that since I never disagree with your points, but only about tone (and that only regarding responses to comments) I am now a troll. Maybe you can get me banned.

You've lost an admirer. Now fire away; I won't shoot back.

Had to replace my US cellphone yesterday, and my main complaint is you can't get one without features. There was no option without a camera other than going to a PDA-equipped model (since corporate policies often don't allow cameras). I don't want features on my phone; I carry a (Japanese-market-only) Zaurus clamshell for features.

Cost? Yeah the US cellphone market is inward-looking. (For regular international calling, VOIP make most sense.) But if I go to a payphone and call your cellphone within the US, I just pay for the payphone - in much of Europe I pay for the cellphone's time too. I seem to remember in Copenhagen a few years ago a $2 local payphone call running out in about 2 minutes - because it was to a friend's cell.

Anyway, this is off topic from monetary policy, isn't it? Glad to see someone's warning the columnists here about the "regular trolls" - no, not really. What's wonderful about your posts, Stirling, is you're a truly independent thinker - not one of the many "me too"-ers. Now, there are two sorts of "trolls" - those doing a "me too" on the other side of a fence, and those like yourself who largely disrespect fences. But calling people trolls is a sort of fence building, a punishment for those who don't chorus "Me too!" in your own herd. Just saying.

Your analysis of the Fed seems spot on though. I'd be happy to "Me too!" that, were it only something I more closely followed - it's certainly an internally-consistent argument.

A tax increase? If it's a broad one, people can't afford it. Most wages have been stagnant for at least five years. If you increase people's taxes while their wages have barely kept up with inflation, aren't you introducing a bit too much pain? Or are you thinking of something only at the top and corporate rates?

thosethingswesay.blogspot.com

IIRC we are collecting something like 18-19% of GDP in taxes and spending something like 22-23%.

A tax increase at some point is inevitable, the sooner the better since the longer we wait the more interest accumulates on the defecit.

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