Re: What economic cycle are we in right now?
Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 9:05 am
You guys seriously..........
Permanent Portfolio Forum
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=4033
Let's get the discussion back on track.Kshartle wrote: You guys seriously..........
You'll need to prove that. Keep in mind that the official CPI is very different from "all prices" They are specifically chosen for a good reason.Kshartle wrote: A. I believe inflation is significantly higher than the government is reporting.
The central bank doesn't really expand the money supply in the way you are suggesting. They can coax the direction of private credit (with interest rates, for instance), but they can't change the amount of net financial assets in the private sector. If you took the time to read both papers, you'd understand that by now.Kshartle wrote: B. I believe the Central bank will continue expanding the money-supply until there is a real dollar crisis then will start raising rates (or the market will force them up)
Perhaps. Perhaps not. You are speculating. We don't try to speculate here.Kshartle wrote:C. The US government will be unable to service it's debt without additional inflation.
And yet, rates went down in both Japan and the US every time credit ratings were slashed in both countries. So, you've already been proven wrong a few times on that one.Kshartle wrote:either way rates are gonna go up as investors recognize the creditworthiness of the US is not AAA, it's more like junk)
And I was hoping you'd take the time to read both papers, as they explain why many of the arguments you were making are nothing more than myths.Kshartle wrote:I was hoping that challenging the wisdom of holding this paricular investment would be met with reasoned economic analysis of the situation.
D. The bond market disagrees with you about the creditworthiness of the U.S. Government. You keep saying that a "default via inflation" is just as much a default as saying, "welp, looks like you're not getting your money back, sorry!" They're hugely different. Your description of "defaulting via inflation" is a feature of every single debt contract in a debt-based monetary system due to the systemic background inflation. The market has priced this in and understands that the interest payments of fixed-interest-rate debt will lose purchasing power over time.Kshartle wrote: It's not that contraversial a position:
A. I believe inflation is significantly higher than the government is reporting.
B. I believe the Central bank will continue expanding the money-supply until there is a real dollar crisis then will start raising rates (or the market will force them up)
C. The US government will be unable to service it's debt without additional inflation.
D. Long-term bondholders are sure to lose purchasing power over time because real rates with either be negative or the Government will write off some of it's debt through a partial re-structuring. (This might only apply to foriegn bonholders or the very wealthy where it is politically palatable, either way rates are gonna go up as investors recognize the creditworthiness of the US is not AAA, it's more like junk)
The bond market really doesn't care...Kshartle wrote:D. Long-term bondholders are sure to lose purchasing power over time
I read the 2nd, half of the first. I'll get back to you on it.Kshartle wrote:What you're describing is a stable supply of FRNs. I haven't overlooked this. The fed can create new FRNs and the supply can still go down.Pointedstick wrote:
If the private sector banking industry destroys a trillion dollars through bad lending and credit defaults, and the fed creates a trillion dollars and uses it to buy bonds and MBS contracts, has the money supply actually expended? Or has the fed restored the money supply back to its previous size?
What you're missing is that the money supply grows and shrinks from two sides: the Fed, led by congressional spending, and also the private banking system as people take out loans, repay them, or default on them. One side can make up for a deficit in the other. Both can grow or shrink at the same time.
Yes. But, let's be clear. The Fed doesn't expand the money supply with a helicopter drop. They influence interest rates, which expands/contracts private credit. They also buy interest-bearing assets (i.e. an asset swap) and this swap leaves the private sector with less interest income and more liquid dollars. (The change in liquidity doesn't make people feel richer after the swap — though it can induce a "crowding out" phenomenon in bidding up certain assets). The Fed pockets all the interest income and returns any profit to the Treasury. In reality, the Fed is removing interest income from the private sector when they do this. And the total amount of net financial assets in the private sector remains the same before and after the Fed transactions are settled. The Fed does not conduct helicopter drops. Only the Treasury can do that (which is what PS is saying).Pointedstick wrote:B. The central bank is only expanding the money supply because Congress appropriates more money. It's really them you want to blame, not the Fed. They're just facilitating what Congress orders. I agree with you that there will be problems if deficit spending continues at a crazy pace after the private sector recovers and begins creating more of its own money again.
I think that part of what Gumby and others are getting at is that without undstanding and including in your analysis what's happening in the private sector, it's impossible to draw any conclusions about what the effect of a given set of fiscal and monetary policies will be.Bean wrote: If the Fed printing money means nothing in the grand scheme of things, then they can give me some. If it does mean something, it means inflation.
and my favorite video dumping on neoclassical economics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQLthVztQSk
The fed doesn't give anyone money, they swap it for bonds. So if you really want the fed could pay your $10k cash for $10k you may hold in bonds. Will you feel richer? Will you go spend more money? Probably not.Bean wrote: If the Fed printing money means nothing in the grand scheme of things, then they can give me some. If it does mean something, it means inflation.
and my favorite video dumping on neoclassical economics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQLthVztQSk
Maybe you can help me understand something here. I keep hearing comments through this discussion that suggest a hard bright line between the public and private sectors. My understanding is that QE is covering two distinct areas. One is the purchase of troubled assets like MBS from the private sector in exchange for FRN (money). In this case the private sector is trading one asset (albeit a troubled one) for another (liquidity), so my impression is that no inflationary pressure would arise from these transactions. The second component of QE is the purchase of Treasury debt with FRN (money), which then goes to the Treasury to be used to fund our government's budget deficit. How will this money not end up in the private sector in the many ways that the government spends it (wages, contracts, entitlements, etc)? And as it ends up in the private sector, how can this additional money not create inflationary pressure?MediumTex wrote:I think that part of what Gumby and others are getting at is that without undstanding and including in your analysis what's happening in the private sector, it's impossible to draw any conclusions about what the effect of a given set of fiscal and monetary policies will be.Bean wrote: If the Fed printing money means nothing in the grand scheme of things, then they can give me some. If it does mean something, it means inflation.
and my favorite video dumping on neoclassical economics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQLthVztQSk
If the private sector is destroying money through extinguishing debt, then the government may be able to "print" huge amounts of money without any inflationary effects. OTOH, if private sector credit is expanding, then the government can actually reduce the money supply through tax collection and tight monetary policy and there may still be inflation.
Glennds, my apologies for not having the time to fully answer all your questions as I have to run, but a few things...glennds wrote:Maybe you can help me understand something here. I keep hearing comments through this discussion that suggest a hard bright line between the public and private sectors. My understanding is that QE is covering two distinct areas. One is the purchase of troubled assets like MBS from the private sector in exchange for FRN (money). In this case the private sector is trading one asset (albeit a troubled one) for another (liquidity), so my impression is that no inflationary pressure would arise from these transactions. The second component of QE is the purchase of Treasury debt with FRN (money), which then goes to the Treasury to be used to fund our government's budget deficit. How will this money not end up in the private sector in the many ways that the government spends it (wages, contracts, entitlements, etc)? And as it ends up in the private sector, how can this additional money not create inflationary pressure?MediumTex wrote:I think that part of what Gumby and others are getting at is that without undstanding and including in your analysis what's happening in the private sector, it's impossible to draw any conclusions about what the effect of a given set of fiscal and monetary policies will be.Bean wrote: If the Fed printing money means nothing in the grand scheme of things, then they can give me some. If it does mean something, it means inflation.
and my favorite video dumping on neoclassical economics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQLthVztQSk
If the private sector is destroying money through extinguishing debt, then the government may be able to "print" huge amounts of money without any inflationary effects. OTOH, if private sector credit is expanding, then the government can actually reduce the money supply through tax collection and tight monetary policy and there may still be inflation.
On a corollary note, it is also my impression that were it not for QE, there would not be a sufficient buying market for Treasury debt, or at least not at the interest rates that are (a) affordable to our government without triggering a debt spiral or (b) at the levels we hope will stimulate the economy back into prosperity.
What am I missing?
Thanks