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It was both the prior is covered in this article, that you won't read,
You can fetch the latter.
I read through it, every word. Mr. Murphy is trying to draw distinction between the rate of change of Vault Cash and Bank Reserves and demand deposits - and causing the housing bubble.
Using a chart to show an increasing rate of change (essentially the change in a change) as "irresponsibly fueling the housing boom from 2000 to 2004" is silly. Its bush league.
The rate of change in the money supply most likely averaged 5% from 2000 to 2004. It peaked at 10% around 2002, falling to around 5% in 2004.
The rate of change in the money supply went from 5% to 11% to 5% from 1990 to 1996. It went from 5% to 11% to 5% to 11% to 5% every 2 or so years from 1980 to 1988. The average rates of increase in the money supply were higher in the 80s and 90s, ie the derivative of this function from 1980 to 2006 would be downward sloping.
I don't recall a housing bubble in the 80s or early/mid 90s. FWIW, the acceleration of the stock market bubble STARTED in 1996.
Therefore, just because the change in the rate of change in money supply is sloping upward from 2000 to 2004, does not mean that money supply was expecially loose. It was more restrictive, on the average, than previous decades.
Happy to explain to you what this article is trying to say. It is complete and total hogwash.
Where do you get this 6 trilliion number?
I don't remember maybe I read it in the NYC or heard it on NBC for Chris Matthews. control point says
Capitalism flows wealth up. Luxury goods are largely dependent on high earners with disposable income - high earners earn from the rest of us. Growth is driven by demand from the rest of us.
The wealth comes from inflation trough the low interest rates in other words they can buy ahead of the inflation. Which is why you see an expansion in high end retailers. In an organic economy you are right the wealth would flow up from commerce. In this economy it flows down from the FED. This is what is meant by the inflation is not even.
Take a look at corporate earnings in general and wages and salaries, post crash.
How could it not go up after 2008?
Consumer credit market has remained stable and is ticking up since mid-2010. We are 2.5 years after this, now.
that is a 3 year window with a .16 spread which applies only to consumer credit. What about commercial credit. That does not indicated anything.
Happy to explain to you what this article is trying to say. It is complete and total hogwash.
Professor Murphy has a doctorate in economics, I don't know your credentials.
What I do know is that a bubble was created and it was not created by the market.
It may be that the money came from foreign lending. It may be that a lower interest rate would not require more money immediately.
Ok lets try this one:
Whoever set up their registration form is an idiot so I tend to distrust the content too.
clearly rising M2 is more than just printing, since the yen strengthened in
the late 80s . . .
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qP9
(look of astonishment)
FYI I added 100 to GDP because you couldn't see both lines if I didn't as they overlapped.
So the increase in prices would come about without an increase in the supply of
money?
Yes.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qPg
Blue(prices) start higher than red(money supply), goes lower, then higher.
Blue(prices) start higher than red(money supply), goes lower, then higher
Ok for that time period. Not that it is conclusive but a lowering of the money supply certainly caused deflation in the early 30s.
lowering of the money supply certainly caused deflation in the early 30s.
Lowering of demand caused deflation.
Lowering of demand caused deflation.
So the money supply dropping by 30% was just a coincidence? That would mean that banks went under the money supply dropped but the real underlying reason was a drop in demand. And the fact that they both occurred at the same time was mearly coincidence.
That does not seem plausible.
we have had the longest recession since the great depression.
What recession? As long as I can remember when I take a cruise the ship is full. Every restaurant I go to is packed. The mall is full of people buying crap. Most people are driving new cars. I hear we're in bad shape on the TV. On the Internet too. I just don't see it.
Losers have always used the economy for an excuse for being a loser. That's nothing new.
So the money supply dropping by 30% was just a coincidence? That would mean that banks went under the money supply dropped but the real underlying reason was a drop in demand. And the fact that they both occurred at the same time was mearly coincidence.
Well, take a look at the image, and tell me what it appears to you is most correlated to the inflation rate.
Inflation rate is the line with the squares.
Well, take a look at the image, and tell me what it appears to you is most correlated to the inflation rate.
It doesn't seem to me that a lack of correlation, is proof of the money supply not be connected to inflation.
(look of astonishment)
yes, this is because money velocity is defined as GDP/supply
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qQv
blue is average wage
red is m2
green is m2 velocity (right)
all indexed at 1969 = 100.
1990 we had a regime change in velocity for some reason.
China? Windows 3?
Greenspan clearly responded in the mid-90s by letting the money supply go.
How much control he had over this is not something I know, this could be just rising credit ballooning via fractional reserve lending.
2002-2006 shows the bubble times as both m2 and m2v were increasing.
but then m2v crashed as people ran out of money to borrow, yet the debt remained and $3T has been QE'd into existence to grow m2 by $3T.
Just for fun, I'll add Japan m2 in yellow:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qQx
showing how they inflated early 1970-1990, but we've caught up 1995-now.
"green is m2 velocity (right)"
Does the plummeting green line indicate why we are not seeing more inflation?
What recession? As long as I can remember when I take a cruise the ship is full. Every restaurant I go to is packed. The mall is full of people buying crap. Most people are driving new cars. I hear we're in bad shape on the TV. On the Internet too. I just don't see it.
Thank God for plastic, sub-prime and cash out refi's....
Artificial propped up market, that's where I want to invest!
yes, velocity is correlated with inflation:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qSQ
but:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qSS
shows how money supply is growing faster than GDP now.
The Fed throws a dollar into the economy, and it functionally disappears somewhere.
sure not hitting wages:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qST
no wage inflation, no inflation, just reallocation.
shows how money supply is growing faster than GDP now.
Is this a ticking time bomb?
Although we do see it in the high end of the market.
sure not hitting wages:
To me this indicates mal-investment.
You are good with these graphs where did you learn how to use them?
The money supply is a ticking time bomb, maybe.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qT1
is Japan's experience.
blue is M2, red is CPI, both 1955 = 100
shows their money has doubled since 1990 while the price level is up ~10% (lack of inflation is due to lack of population growth and the strengthening yen making imports cheaper and putting downward wage pressure on export jobs)
We're not Japan, so I don't know what's going to happen. But as long as the 1% keeps taking all the money:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/GINIALLRH
inflation is going to be hard to find IMO.
>You are good with these graphs where did you learn how to use them?
just screwing around on the FRED site over the years.
To make a new graph I just google "PAYEMS" which gets me to their graphing portal where I can search for what I want to see.
is Japan's experience.
I have read where Japan has made it's money is by manufacturing goods and buying commodities at lower prices. With the current devaluing of the Yen it has made the margin on this very thin.
To make a new graph I just google "PAYEMS" which gets me to their graphing portal where I can search for what I want to see.
Thanks
I'm thinking that the real cause of inflation is demographics, which rarely gets mentioned. But that is still a symptom because the money supply could simply be adjusted downward. But the entire economy is so leveraged that downward adjustment causes big problems so the FED cannot do this without creating these problems. Same reason China builds empty cities. But the reality is that it only exacerbates the problem.
3. Deflationary depression: def. "an increase in standard of living"
You say that like its a bad thing.
3. Deflationary depression: def. "an increase in standard of living"
I know this makes your head spin, I suppose because the worst time the United States endured was the great depression. But most depression occur with inflation. E.G. this economy is in a depression with inflation.
Just to be clear a depression:
Definition of 'Depression'
A severe and prolonged downturn in economic activity. In economics, a depression is commonly defined as an extreme recession that lasts two or more years. A depression is characterized by economic factors such as substantial increases in unemployment, a drop in available credit, diminishing output, bankruptcies and sovereign debt defaults, reduced trade and commerce, and sustained volatility in currency values. In times of depression, consumer confidence and investments decrease, causing the economy to shut down
As to the other you underestimate how hard it is to stay on top. And the greatest creator of inequality is inflation it helps the investor and hurts the worker. The most egregious in this regard is crony capitalism.
3. Deflationary depression: def. "an increase in standard of living"
You say that like its a bad thing.
Evidently there are no job losses in such a depression, just a tremendous strengthening of money (in the bread lines). The debt liquidation spiral is another myth, apparently, and we would have nothing to fear of the skyrocketing of real interest rates. But that's just that old pesky "number" thing the Austrians don't want to mess with. What could be more inconvenient than subtracting a negative number when measuring at all is frowned upon. I guess, when everyone's broke, it won't matter because supply will be infinite and price will be zero and everyone will have all they need, job or no.
So you prefer stagflation?
But most depression occur with inflation. E.G. this economy is in a depression with inflation.
I can't tell if you're being serious or just trolling at this point. The definition you posted completely refutes everything you are saying.
So you prefer stagflation?
So those are the only two choices? Depression or Stagflation?
I choose the third choice--slow growth with mild inflation.
The definition you posted completely refutes everything you are saying.
A depression is characterized by economic factors such as substantial increases in unemployment,
Yes
a drop in available credit
Yes
diminishing output
Yes but camouflaged by FED spending
bankruptcies and sovereign debt defaults
Yes in other countries but somewhat confused in this country because of the FED printing 6 trillion
consumer confidence and investments decrease
Yes but again camouflaged because of FED spending.
just screwing around on the FRED site over the years.
Do you know how to get a graph that shows the entire US private credit graph over a long period of time?
A depression is characterized by economic factors such as substantial increases in unemployment,
Yes
Unemployment has been falling for at least 2-3 years.
diminishing output
Yes but camouflaged by FED spending
There are no "but"s. Output is either diminished, or it's not.
bankruptcies and sovereign debt defaults
Yes in other countries but somewhat confused in this country because of the FED printing 6 trillion
Again. There is no confused. It's either yes or no.indigenous says
consumer confidence and investments decrease
Yes but again camouflaged because of FED spending.
NO! The answer is NO.
It's unbelievable how you guys can rationalize being 100% completely wrong. And pretend like you are right.
I picked the Panthers today. I was 100% correct but it was camouflaged by the 2 TDs from Capernick.
It's unbelievable how you guys can rationalize being 100% completely wrong. And pretend like you are right.
I picked the Panthers today. I was 100% correct but it was camouflaged by the 2 TDs from Capernick.
One of your problems is that you conflate things. Football does not have any thing to do with economic depression.
Malinvestment absolutely gives the appearance that things are better. This is the same thing that Japan is doing and destroying the Japanese people's savings in the process.
One of your problems is that you conflate things. Football does not have any thing to do with economic depression.
And you have a very difficult time with analogies. Obviously football has little to do with the economy. Wrong is wrong, however. Which is the point.
Malinvestment absolutely gives the appearance that things are better. This is the same thing that Japan is doing and destroying the Japanese people's savings in the process.
OK--give me a few examples of current "malinvestment". And how it's making the economy look better.
What specifically is Japan doing that is destroying people's savings?
Hmmm... I wonder why that is???
Yep--labor force participation rate is part of it. As is job creation.
OK--give me a few examples of current "malinvestment". And how it's making the economy look better.
Overpriced houses, GM, Solyndra, TBTF banks and AIG
And how it's making the economy look better.
The price of housing, stocks, and treasuries are overvalued
What specifically is Japan doing that is destroying people's savings
Printing money out of thin air.
Unemployment has been falling for at least 2-3 years.
Hmmm... I wonder why that is???
Oh come on CIC haven't you been listening it is caused by inequality...
OK--I'll actually agree that GM, AIG and the TBTF banks could be considered malinvestment. Houses and Solyndra are not. Bailouts are often poor investments.
Stupid Liberal to the core... to say "Housing and Solyndra are not malinvestments"..
LOL! how stupid...
Stupid Liberal to the core... to say "Housing and Solyndra are not
malinvestments"..
LOL! how stupid...
They are not. Look up the definition of malinvestment and get back with me.
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