MediumTex,
Note that I gave you several examples of items going up around 7,5% per year and that you dismissed all of them.
I believe your arguments why to dismiss them are not valid.
MediumTex wrote:
Marc De Mesel wrote:
I did not find products or services with historical prices dating back to 1972.
I did find the following commodities, necessities and assets that went up in price around 7.5% per year:
Oil
End 1971 = $3.56 per barrel
End 2011 = $98.7 per barrel
Inflation: 8.66% per year
The rising price of oil doesn't tell the whole story, though. In response to rising oil prices, our uses of oil have become more efficient, and thus I can do the same things today that I could have done in 1971 while consuming significantly less oil in the process.
Also, oil price inflation has not been just the result of dollar devaluation; it has also been the result of oil exploration and production costs rising as much of the world's cheap and easy to find oil has already been discovered and produced.
Let's say it's true that the price of oil went up, not just because of dollar devaluation, but also because of other reasons. Does that matter to the one paying the bill?
We both agree with the definition of inflation, the rising costs of living expenses. If this is due to dollar devalution, higher taxes, war or natural disasters, the rising cost of living is still there.
For your information on judging dollar devaluation I am also offering the price rises of other important energy sources that have suffered less from government intervention and shortages:
Coal (
http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/ann ... ?t=ptb0709)
1971 = $7.13 per short ton
2011 = $57.64 per short ton
Prise rise: 5.36% per year
Natural Gas (Residential Sector) (
http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/ann ... ?t=ptb0608)
1971 = $1.15 per Thousand Cubic Feet
2011 = $10.80 per Thousand Cubic Feet
Prise rise: 5.76% per year
These lower price rises suggest that you are right that oil prices have gone up more than the dollar devaluation. At the same time however coal and natural gas are suggesting that the dollar devaluation an-sich has been around 5.5% per year!
However, since it does not matter why something goes up in price, and oil being a very important commodity used in many of our living expenses, the price of oil having gone up by 8.7% per year certainly is an important factor when you are trying to estimate the rising cost of living expenses I think.
MediumTex wrote:
Marc De Mesel wrote:
Gold
End 1971 = $38 / ounce
End 2011 = $1531 / ounce
Inflation: 9.68%
Silver
End 1971 = $0.27 / ounce
End 2011 = $28.18 / ounce
Inflation: 12.32%
I don't know if I would classify price movements of gold and silver as the kind of inflation we are trying to capture. To me, when we talk about inflation we are talking about how much money we must take with us when we go to the grocery store and the mall to buy the same basket of goods.
Agreed with your definition of inflation, that we are trying to measure the rising costs of living. I am certainly not claiming that because gold went up by 9.68% per year that rising cost of living has gone up by 9.68% per year.
However, you asked for examples of 'a single item' that went up more than 7.5% per year. This is another one. And it is a valid example. Also to estimate rising cost of living expenses.
Gold is a very important commodity in the production of juwelry. Juwelry is another living expense item.
Silver, being the best guider of electricity, the best guider of heat and the best reflector of light of all elements, is a vital commodity in the production of all kind of electrical and light dependend items that we use in our daily lives. The price of silver going up by 12.32% per year since 1972 is another valid and good example to calculate the rising cost of living.
MediumTex wrote:
I wonder if that figure takes into account better (and safer) building materials, increased energy efficiency, and other improvements in home construction since 1971. In other words, I wonder if they are taking a 1971 house that was well-maintained but not updated and comparing its original price with its 2011 price, OR are they taking the average price of a 1971 house and comparing it with the average price of a 2011 house?
I would also like to see if they are comparing houses with the same square footage, or if the median prices are for all homes. We all know that average square footage of homes has increased significantly since 1971.
I was dissappointed to see you dismissed this too
Agreed that houses and cars go up in quality/features/size over the years. However, with sound money such as gold at the time, eventhough houses went up in size and quality, the price remained the same! That is because over the years we get better at doing the same. Meaning with less resources we do the same. Or with the same resources we offer more! The price does not go up!
So an average house in 1971 costed $20k, an average house today, if gold was money, would also cost $20k, and indeed it would be bigger and better then an average house 40 years ago. Since it costs not $20 but $200k today, and this means a price rise of 5.46% this is certainly another good example to estimate the rising costs of living expenses. Requiring no hedonic adjustments!
MediumTex wrote:
Marc De Mesel wrote:
Stocks (SP500)
End 1971 = 102.09
End 2011 = 1257.6
Inflation: 6.48%
Increases in stock values are not inflation, IMHO, though underlying inflation in the economy CAN affect stock prices.
Agreed, stocks are of no importance to calculate the rising costs of living and are not worthy including in a basket of goods and services. We can drop this example.
MediumTex wrote:
Marc De Mesel wrote:
Agreed, most other commodities (sugar, soybeans, cacoa, ...) went up only 3-4% per year since 1972 and indeed the milk you quoted even less.
The New Corvette however is also quite high:
End 1971 = $5,472
End 2011 = $49,600
Inflation: 5.67%
Compare the performance characteristics of a 1971 Corvette with a 2011 Corvette and I think that this may account for some of the price difference. I suspect that the 2011 Corvette is faster, safer, more efficient, more reliable and produces fewer emissions than the 1971 Corvette. In other words, if the 2011 Corvette had been available in 1971, I'll bet it would have cost more than $5,472.
Again I don't agree with your reasoning here as we can expect a Corvette to go up in quality/size for the same price. Please note also that you gave the Corvette yourself as an example to illustrate that inflation could not have been 7.5% as I claimed. I point out to you that the Corvette went up 5.67% per year and you dismiss that number also.
I think hedonic adjustments have truth in it but are abused. Say that the Corvette used to be a luxurious sportscar only affordable to the rich, being one of the highest quality sportscars at the time, and today it has changed to being the most popular sports car, affordable for the middle class, but indeed not of highest quality. Then you cannot compare these prices. But if the Corvette was at the time also the most popular sports car affordable for the middle class and still is today, then you can compare these prices very well to calculate the rising costs of living expenses.
And indeed, an average house costed $20k in 1971 and a Corvette $5k in 1971 which is 1/4th of the price of an average house, the same today with a price tag of $50k and an average house costs $200k, also 1/4th of the price of an average house, suggesting strongly that the Corvette today is indeed the same kind of product as it was in 1971. And this product/living expense has gone up 5.7% per year since 1972.
MediumTex wrote:
Marc De Mesel wrote:
I agree with you my estimate of 7.5% inflation since 1972 is too high. I think 5.5% is more correct since 1972.
Thanks for helping me see that I was wrong.
What do you think of an estimate of 5.5% since 1972?
I would say more like 3-4% when you consider the technological improvements in the form of enhanced performance, increased durability, improved efficiency and reduced maintenance on many products today compared to 1971.
Even if we said 5%, that gets you back to the PP's 4.5% or so inflation-adjusted long-term return, which is what the PP crowd has been saying all along.
If you estimate true inflation at 5% since 1972 then the PP indeed returned 4.5% after inflation since 1972.
I estimate true inflation in the US at 5.5% so that gives me 4% return after inflation but before expenses!
Earlier in the this thread I estimated these expenses (brokerage fees, storage costs, taxes) at 1.2% per year for the PP. Pointedstick helped me see that this estimate was too high for today as he calculated these expenses were only 0.2% today. Personally I think 0.2% is not representative for the average PP investor who today I estimate does lose 0.5% to direct expenses. But I can agree to lower my estimate from 1.2% to 0.5%.
However, that is today, I think in the 70's and 80's direct expenses were considerably higher because at the time brokerage fees, storage fees, and taxes on investments, were very likely considerably higher. I think it is reasonable to estimate average direct expenses - since 1972 - to be around 1% per year.
So if I deduct 4% return after inflation - 1% direct expenses = 3% real return since 1972 with the PP.
And then I think it is correct to also deduct your own expense of setting up and managing your PP. As indeed, it requires work. Or you can outsource that work to a fund manager, who will also charge you today 0.5%, but in the 70's and 80's, the same service provider if he would have existed, would have charged you I estimate around 2% per year. So I think estimating managing costs at an average cost of 1% per year since 1972 is also reasonable.
This leaves me with 4% return after inflation - 1% direct expenses - 1% managing costs =
2% real return since 1972 with the PP. This is higher than my initial estimate when we started this thread where I estimated real return of the PP since 1972 to be close to zero. I have to admit it is 2% per year, which is not close to zero. It is low however I would say.
So, instead of saying, "with the PP chance of losing (and winning!) is close to zero" it is more correct of me to say '
chance of losing (and winning!) a lot is low'.
Or, the PP offers the highest security possible by hedging all possible economic scenario's, and so the chance of losing is the lowest from all possible investments. However, your real profit on average has been only 2% per year since 1972, so you make some money with it, but you cannot become considerably richer from this. The PP will double the purchasing power of your capital only after 3 decades. If you want to make money through investing, if you want to become considerably richer through investing, the PP will not do it for you.
And even if you do not want to become considerably richer through investing, but you do want to make a living from your investments, but not eat your capital when living from it, you will need - a lot - of capital to achieve that with the PP. As you can burn only 2%, and if you do it yourself, only 3% of your capital every year. If you burn more you are losing purchasing power.
So I would say the PP is the best solution for a defensive portfolio where capital protection is the highest priority.
However, if your goal is considerable growth in purchasing power, the PP is a bad solution and has only a very low chance of achieving that goal for you.
Ie:
The Permanent Portfolio is for Growth Security. The Variable Portfolio is for Speculation Growth.
If you or someone else disagrees with my wordings, views, arguments, always interested to hear your points of view.
"We think, the more people on earth, the less we each have. But it's exactly the opposite, the more people, the more resources we all have!" - Julian Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2