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The fed is pumping liquidity into the banks, which is keeping that money in the hands of the rich
I don't follow that---the Fed is buying assets from banks, and injecting money into circulation through bond purchases. How do either of these keep money in the hands of the rich?
The distribution problem is caused by the lack of leverage of labor vs. capital and current tax structure.
It is agreed that hoarding money, whether in cash or in idle balances, is deflationary in its effects." - Without trust in the financial system, folks will hoard cash. The failure to apply the law to financial crimes and reform Wall Street reinforces this belief, and is deflationary
Wealth inequality is deflationary and that's what the Fed is fighting.. Unfortunately, at some the Fed will lose and Austrians will get their beloved deflation. I'm afraid they won't enjoy it once it comes, however.
Why are you fixated on what a dollar buys?
People are fixated on what a dollar buys because they look to it as a way to store value. Misguided, perhaps, but it's easy-think and comforting to think of the world as unchanging.
Wealth inequality is deflationary and that's what the Fed is fighting.
Corrected: "Wealth inequality is deflationary and that's what the Fed is causing."
here was massive bailout for FIRE.
Who owns the Fed?
If you're trying to tweak your anxiety to the fevered pitch a of tinfoil hat level, I suggest you ask bgamall4.
it's a simple question. If you don't know the answer, that's OK.
The Fed doesn't set savings rates. Further, savings rates NEVER keep up with inflation--it's the cost of safety and liquidity.
That's simply false. Since 2009 the one year treasury bill is far, far below inflation, whereas in the years before (bailouts+QE) it was mostly well above inflation.
Savings rates of near zero seem to indicate that there is plenty of money in savings.
No it means banks can borrow from the Fed's discount window at zero. Why pay anybody else more?
there is plenty of money in savings.
"savings" is money leaving the paycheck economy, sigh
it can all return if it funds loans that increase demand for labor, but not if it's buried in a coffee can or used to build a lights-out factory for that matter.
The fed is pumping liquidity into the banks, which is keeping that money in the hands of the rich
I don't follow that---the Fed is buying assets from banks, and injecting money into circulation through bond purchases. How do either of these keep money in the hands of the rich?
The distribution problem is caused by the lack of leverage of labor vs. capital and current tax structure.
Who is getting the money that the Fed is injecting into circulation?
China is the next Japan.
. . .
Japan...China...India...Nigeria...there will always be an emerging market and a fading market...
Who is getting the money that the Fed is injecting into circulation?
In both cases, nobody is getting "free" money--owners of US bonds are selling those bonds for cash, or owners of MBS are selling them for cash. The Fed puts more cash into circulation by taking on assets.
Since 2009 the one year treasury bill is far, far below inflation, whereas in the years before (bailouts+QE) it was mostly well above inflation.
OK--I was referring to bank savings--1 year treasury isn't as liquid. In any event, 1 year treasury rates are determined by supply and demand--I feel like a broken record, but the reason its rate is low is because there is too much savings, not too little. More demand = lower rate.
No it means banks can borrow from the Fed's discount window at zero. Why pay anybody else more?
Incorrect. They borrow from other banks first and, when annualized, the rate is higher than savings rates.
It and its member banks are independent of congress
The member banks, of which the NY Fed is the most important, are owned "by big private banks." Source: http://www.factcheck.org/2008/03/federal-reserve-bank-ownership/
It seems difficult to determine who these banks are. It is not inconceivable that if the NY Fed is owned by Wall Street banks, and they are committing securities fraud, that the NY Fed will look the other way.
Deflation is caused by a decrease in the money supply.
Inflation is caused by an increase in the money supply.
There is no other definition.
And just because there is inflation does not meant there are price increases. Several factors may explain that such as lack of demand and increase in supply.
And just because there is inflation does not meant there are price increases. Several factors may explain that such as lack of demand and increase in supply.
lol--what is the point of defining inflation in that manner? The point of that measure is to characterize price increases and their effect on consumers. Who cares about increases in money supply if they have no effect?
hanks for that. There are attributes of the FED system better left to the fog of memory.
Very true and well said.
Recall that NY fed president said he did not view his role to be that of a regulator when questioned during his confirmation hearing why he did not regulate the Wall Street banks in the run up to the financial crisis.
From the Fed website:
"What is the purpose of the Federal Reserve System?
Supervising and regulating banks and other important financial institutions to ensure the safety and soundness of the nation's banking and financial system and to protect the credit rights of consumers."
One shouldn't expect Patnet posters to be experts on the Fed, especially with regards to ownership of its member banks,information regarding which is purposely opaque, IMHO. But even the NY Fed president is unsure of the role of the Fed, it seems.
But the Fed didn't do its job in the run up to the financial crisis.
First of all, wages HAVE kept up.
No they haven't.
Here is an analysis from your very same source:
Five Decades of Middle Class Wages: Update
November 12, 2014
by Doug Short
Here's a perspective on personal income for production and nonsupervisory private employees going back five decades.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics has been collecting data on this workforce cohort since 1964. The government numbers provide some excellent insights on the income history of what we might think of as the private middle class wage earner.
The first snapshot shows the growth of average hourly earnings. The nominal data exhibits a relatively smooth upward trend.
There are, however, two critical pieces of information that dramatically alter the nominal series: The average hours per week and 2) inflation.
The average hours per week has trended in quite a different direction, from around 39 hours per week in the mid-1960s to a low of 33 hours at the end of the last recession. The post-recession recovery has seen a disappointingly trivial 0.8 bounce (that's 48 minutes).
What about inflation? The next chart adjusts hourly earnings to the purchasing power of today's dollar. I've use the familiar Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers (usually abbreviated as the CPI) for the adjustment with a linear extrapolation for the latest month. Theoretically, the CPI is designed to reflect the cost-of-living for metropolitan-area households.
Now let's multiply the real average hourly earnings by the average hours per week. We thus get a hypothetical number for average weekly wages of this middle-class cohort, currently at $700 -- well below its $828 peak back in the early 1970s.
Note that this is a gross income number that doesn't include any tax withholding or other deductions. Disposable income would be noticeably lower.
Latest Hypothetical Annual Earnings: $34,983, Down 15.5% from 42 Years Ago
If we multiply the hypothetical weekly earnings by 50, we get an annual figure of $34,983. That's a 15.5% decline from the similarly calculated real peak in October 1972. In the charts above, I've highlighted the presidencies during this timeframe. My purpose is not necessarily to suggest political responsibility, but rather to offer some food for thought. I will point out that the so-called supply-side economics popularized during the Reagan administration (aka "trickle-down" economics), wasn't very friendly to production and nonsupervisory employees.
The FED and the Treasury and the Full Faith and Credit of the U.S. Gov. aren't going to prevent free market excess. They're going to clean up after it.
They are creating/aiding free market excess by forcing interest rates at lows. Greenspan, Bernanke, Yellen doesn't matter.
The FED and the Treasury and the Full Faith and Credit of the U.S. Gov. aren't going to prevent free market excess. They're going to clean up after it.
They are creatiing/aiding free market excess by forcing interest rates at lows. Greenspan, Bernanke, Yellen doesn't matter.
There is nothing even resembling a "free market" today. At best, the U.S. economy should be described as a fascist form of crony capitalism.
As Milton Friedman so accurately stated,
"Indeed, a major source of objection to a free economy is precisely
that... it gives people what they want instead of what a particular
group thinks they ought to want. Underlying most arguments against
the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself."
No they haven't.
Here is an analysis from your very same source:
Are you arguing that since Reagan they haven't kept up? I agree with that. My point was that from 1939 to 1978 or so, they did.
Well, if companies were not up to their eyeballs in debt, they would not have to lay so many people off.
That is fiction. Companies only employ the minimum number of people needed to meet demand. Whether they have a mountain of cash, or are up to their eyeballs in debt, they will lay off employees that are not needed.
Otherwise, they wouldn't be serving their stockholders....
They are creating/aiding free market excess by forcing interest rates at lows. Greenspan, Bernanke, Yellen doesn't matter.
There is nothing even resembling a "free market" today.
OK, guys, is what we have too free (as in too much government meddling) or not free enough (as in too much government meddling)? The government is your boogeyman, so show me how it's responsible for both the presence and the absence of something. Or you could just cut to the chase and blame it for existing in the first place.
Too much government meddling:
Telling two consenting human adults can and cannot do in the privacy of their own bedroom.
Marijuana laws
To little government meddling
Goldman Sachs and the rest of the gang.
This also does not relate to yoru overall point that inflation is good for normal americans as it keeps money from being hoarded
That wasn't my point. My point was that inflation is a distraction. Real wages is what matters--whether inflation is 1% or 10%
So there is PLENTY of money in circulation and PLENTY stashed in real negative interest bank accounts. Yet the labor participation rate continues to drop. What's clear is inflation is NOT helping spur demand for labor.
Obviously. The problem is inequality, not inflation.
I think you are making the rather dramatic assumption that deflation will make people hoard cash looking for a bottom. I'm not seeing it.
You don't see it because that's not at all the point I'm making. The point is that deflation occurs because of reduced demand. It doesn't happen in a vacuum.
Here are a real world example of "deflation" spurring demand for a high ticket item:
http://www.cnet.com/news/microsoft-cuts-windows-8-oem-prices-to-spur-demand-wsj/
Maybe you didn't see my earlier post, but I'll summarize it again. Both loss of demand and productivity gains can both cause prices to fall, but they are not the same thing.
@New Renter, I have a problem reconciling your graphs with the concept that people are paid according to their productivity.
1) the productivity gains may not have raised prices of the goods. Fast food restaurants are incredibly productive but the dollar menu is still there.
2) I don't think your graphs show total wages paid to employees. i.e. employee wages + paid holidays + paid sick leave + paid personal days + paid vacation time + employer subsidized dental/medical/vision/prescription insurance + retirement plan employer contributions + employer paid life insurance + Medicare tax + Social Security tax + unemployment tax + workers compensation tax + etc., etc., etc.
3) they do not measure the specific contribution of labor to growth in output. Rather, they reflect the joint effects of many influences,
including changes in technology; capital investment; utilization of capacity, energy, and materials; the use of purchased services inputs, including contract employment services; the organization of production; managerial skill; in addition to the characteristics and effort of the workforce.â€
That wasn't my point. My point was that inflation is a distraction. Real wages is what matters--whether inflation is 1% or 10%
So show some evidence that workers are directly worse off with deflation than inflation.
@New Renter, I have a problem reconciling your graphs with the concept that people are paid according to their productivity.
1) the productivity gains may not have raised prices of the goods. Fast food restaurants are incredibly productive but the dollar menu is still there.
Why would productivity gains raise the price of goods?
I don't think your graphs show total wages paid to employees. i.e. employee wages + paid holidays + paid sick leave + paid personal days + paid vacation time + employer subsidized dental/medical/vision/prescription insurance + retirement plan employer contributions + employer paid life insurance + Medicare tax + Social Security tax + unemployment tax + workers compensation tax + etc., etc., etc.
Most of these benefits have been declining as well.
they do not measure the specific contribution of labor to growth in output. Rather, they reflect the joint effects of many influences,
including changes in technology; capital investment; utilization of capacity, energy, and materials; the use of purchased services inputs, including contract employment services; the organization of production; managerial skill; in addition to the characteristics and effort of the workforce.â€
If labor isn't productive it's eliminated rather quickly.
1) the productivity gains may not have raised prices of the goods. Fast food restaurants are incredibly productive but the dollar menu is still there.
Why would productivity gains raise the price of goods?
Misspoke, meant to say price of labor.
Most of these benefits have been declining as well.
How does that effect the graphs?
If labor isn't productive it's eliminated rather quickly.
Not the point.
Too much government meddling:
Telling two consenting human adults can and cannot do in the privacy of their own bedroom.
Marijuana lawsTo little government meddling
Goldman Sachs and the rest of the gang.
Exactly. Keep in mind that no laws were needed, just enforcement of existing laws. GS committed clear cut fraud for which joe 6 pack would go straight to prison. But the rule of law was abolished by the administration.
GS committed clear cut fraud
What did they do?
Sold toxic investments to clients as "prime" and "safe" while knowing they would blow up shortly thereafter, even bragging in emails about it (referring to them as "junk" or similar). It doesn't matter what rating they had, you cannot sell a car with a perfect carfax record if you have inside knowledge that it is in very bad shape and will break down shortly. This will get you straight to jail. Yet, nobody was prosecuted, ergo the rule of law was abolished. Placeholder was the perfect lapdog to preside (or better not preside) over this.
GS committed clear cut fraud
What did they do?
JPM did that too - look up "sack of shit" with jpm.
Clearly the market is too free then. We need more regulation and oversight.
No, you just need to apply existing laws. Otherwise the new laws will affect the small fish only and make things worse, same for too cryptic/long laws. There is no leeway in this, if you have knowledge something is shit you have to disclose it. Also keep in mind that not only weren't the laws enforced, the offending institutions were bailed out from going bankrupt, rewarding criminals who should be in jail with continued multi-million dollar bonuses. How's that for a good slap in the face?
Clearly the market is too free then. We need more regulation and oversight.
That is what you got out of that? I get corrupt crony capitalism that deserves the AF treatment.
So show some evidence that workers are directly worse off with deflation than inflation.
See 1930s. That's deflation.
Last time they laid off employees who were needed, in order to pay the debt.
I doubt it. If they laid off employees that were needed, their profits would go down and they would pay off debt more slowly.
Sold toxic investments to clients as "prime" and "safe" while knowing they would blow up shortly thereafter, even bragging in emails about it (referring to them as "junk" or similar). It doesn't matter what rating they had, you cannot sell a car with a perfect carfax record if you have inside knowledge that it is in very bad shape and will break down shortly. This will get you straight to jail. Yet, nobody was prosecuted, ergo the rule of law was abolished. Placeholder was the perfect lapdog to preside (or better not preside) over this.
It's not that simple. I agree that they should have been prosecuted, but it's far from a slam dunk case.
A good lawyer can easily make a case that it's not fraud if they have an outside ratings agency certify the risk-regardless if the broker disagrees. That's why those agencies exist--to get an "unbiased" certification of risk so that the brokers can't screw you.
IMO--the ratings agencies ought to be prosecuted as well.
See 1930s. That's deflation.
And I think it's clear that the 1970s higher unemployment rate and concomitant inflation were BOTH driven by the same dynamic, baby boomers (born in the 1950s) flooding into the workforce.
We got inflation then because the job market expanded to take this influx.
We've not got inflation now because the job market is NOT expanding iike then.
shows we're "expanding" at HALF the peak rate of the 1970s.
And I put that in scare quotes since the job growth under Obama has been just getting us back to the 2007 peak still.
I can hear Indigiot clawing at the door, but his squealing catechism just doesn't come through
That I believe...
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According to the latest figures, deflation is now perched on China’s doorstep.
In September, China’s consumer price index was up 1.6%, but its producer price index fell 1.8%. The CPI increase was its lowest since 2010.
Economic growth is also receding. It’s hard to pinpoint the exact figures, because Chinese economic data is notoriously sketchy. But in September, demand for electric power, a “bellwether for China economic activity,†fell 8.4% from the prior month, the second straight monthly decline.
“Deflation is the real risk in China,†stated the chief economist at a Hong Kong bank.
http://www.globaldeflationnews.com/deflation-rearing-its-ugly-head-in-subtle-and-not-so-subtle-ways-around-the-globe/