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What Happened?


               
2015 Apr 26, 9:33am   22,453 views  49 comments

by Dan8267   follow (4)  

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My grandpa worked at grocery store and made enough money to raise a family in Santa Monica. I work at a grocery store, and I can't even afford to rent a room in LA. What happened?

What happened is that, despite worker productivity quadrupling, the distribution of the wealth has shifted so far away from the wealth producers and to the owner class that it more than offsets the increase in productivity.

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1   mell   2015 Apr 26, 9:39am  

What happened is that the dollar has been devalued to the hilt and its devaluation (i.e. printing of money, issuing of debt) was used to prop up the most "connected" (corrupt) sectors such as healthcare, housing and farming, which also happen to serve the essential needs of everyone. Gotta wait til the next crash.

2   Ceffer   2015 Apr 26, 9:44am  

300 percent more people crowding into the coastal areas than when grandpa was around?

3   Dan8267   2015 Apr 26, 11:05am  

Ceffer says

300 percent more people crowding into the coastal areas than when grandpa was around?

True, but those 300% more people are still each 4 times as productive leading to 1200% as much wealth, so it does not explain the drop in quality of life.

4   Dan8267   2015 Apr 26, 11:08am  

mell says

What happened is that the dollar has been devalued to the hilt and its devaluation

True, currency debasement steals wealth from the poor and the middle class and gives it to the rich, but for the guy living paycheck-to-paycheck that doesn't matter because he has no savings. So it still does not explain why the grandson can't live off his salary doing the same thing that his grandfather did and raised a family with.

5   Bellingham Bill   2015 Apr 26, 11:51am  

It's not the devaluing dollar, the Trilateral Commission, or teh joos that is causing high real home prices in LA, it's simply supply & demand unbalance aka Market Failure.

Housing is *the* major life expense, and all this money isn't going into just the sticks & bricks but rather the actual deeded exclusive perpetual (for fee simple tenancy) right to use the land and housing good itself. To secure this right one has to outbid everyone else who wants this deeded right, and supply is limited if not fixed and demand is unbounded (everyone would like to own the whole world if they could).

The good side of the LA basin got filled up before I was born, and I'm getting old now!

There's been a lot of infill development, but not enough!

What I rented for $700 in 90025 in 1991 now rents for $2300! This is simply because supply of quality housing (or even shitty housing) hasn't kept up with Gen Y arriving on the rental market. Gen Y really started rolling in 1990, so they're turning 25 this year. The median Gen Yer is age 22!

Complicating matters is that since I last lived there in 1992, the crappy neighborhoods -- 80% of the land area -- have expanded more. Downtown has gentrified a bit but not enough to make a difference in the supply picture.

https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CALOSA7POP

6   mell   2015 Apr 26, 1:04pm  

Bellingham Bill says

It's not the devaluing dollar, the Trilateral Commission, or teh joos that is causing high real home prices in LA, it's simply supply & demand unbalance aka Market Failure.

2008 the rents dropped to almost half of what they are today, same for house prices. Sure there is a growing population, but it's effects are lesser on the price (more people will live under one roof then). Can't spot the bubble? When the Fed announced they were buying MBS for an unlimited time until further notice and depressing rates to near zero that was a starting short for the big boys as well as small speculators to bid up houses again, roll over the debt for next to nothing until they get their desired payout, and for the banks to give mortgages to everybody, putting immense pressure on this sector. Without the MBS purchasing program and 6%+ interest rates house prices and rents would look much differently. The dollar was purposely devalued to support a few sectors.

7   mell   2015 Apr 26, 1:08pm  

Dan8267 says

True, currency debasement steals wealth from the poor and the middle class and gives it to the rich, but for the guy living paycheck-to-paycheck that doesn't matter because he has no savings. So it still does not explain why the grandson can't live off his salary doing the same thing that his grandfather did and raised a family with.

When talking about today's lower wage jobs such as grocery store workers it is likely that increased influx from women, students (student debt anyone?) - possibly with largely useless degrees - and (to a lesser extent) immigrants has put enormous pressure on the demand for these types of jobs, therefore reducing the salary.

8   Reality   2015 Apr 26, 2:56pm  

Inflation is a process that transfers wealth to those who get the new money first from those who get it later. The grocers get the money late after the money has already gone around multiple rounds in the economy.

Also, grandpa's wage at the grocery store paid not only his labor but also grandma's labor at home cooking and cleaning at home in order to enable grandpa working at the store. Nowadays, your wife/girlfriend/hookup partner is supposed to be a strong and independent woman getting paid by her own employer. LOL!

9   Reality   2015 Apr 26, 3:02pm  

Bill, if it makes you feel better as a multi-decade renter, those who bought in Detroit in the 1980's and those who bought in Tokyo in the 1980's (perhaps even your land lord) are even worse off than you are now.

People who bought in LA and NYC are like having invested in the successful companies owning the right set of patents. The usual anti-development policies advocated by the usual left only make the market position of the owners even stronger.

10   anonymous   2015 Apr 26, 5:40pm  

True, but those 300% more people are still each 4 times as productive leading to 1200% as much wealth, so it does not explain the drop in quality of life.

Are grocery store workers really 4 times more productive?

11   Dan8267   2015 Apr 26, 5:49pm  

errc says

Are grocery store workers really 4 times more productive?

Workers in general are. In any case, today's grocery store workers are at least somewhat more productive than those of 70 years ago with laser scanners, electronic payment, and large-scale grocery stores. They certainly aren't less productive.

12   Dan8267   2015 Apr 26, 5:51pm  

mell says

When talking about today's lower wage jobs such as grocery store workers it is likely that increased influx from women, students (student debt anyone?) - possibly with largely useless degrees - and (to a lesser extent) immigrants has put enormous pressure on the demand for these types of jobs, therefore reducing the salary.

Which is just a fancy way of saying that the owner class is taxing the wealth producers (workers) an even more outlandish percentage of their wealth production than two generations ago. Saying supply and demand isn't a justification, moral or economic, for something. They aren't magic words that cause fundamental reasons to become inconsequential.

13   bob2356   2015 Apr 26, 8:46pm  

mell says

2008 the rents dropped to almost half of what they are today

Where exactly was that at?

14   mell   2015 Apr 26, 8:50pm  

bob2356 says

mell says

2008 the rents dropped to almost half of what they are today

Where exactly was that at?

San Francisco bay area. The have roughly doubled since then. They would have increased somewhat via an organic recovery anyways, but at least 50% of the increase is due to the Fed buying MBS and suppressing rates. Speculators and big boys have been loading up on RE as soon as ZIRP and QE/MBS buying was decided. They will also have no qualms getting rid of non-performing debt as soon as the next crash hits. Rinse and repeat.

15   bob2356   2015 Apr 26, 9:44pm  

mell says

bob2356 says

mell says

2008 the rents dropped to almost half of what they are today

Where exactly was that at?

San Francisco bay area. The have roughly doubled since the

So you are back where you started at? Hopefully you put the savings to work.

16   mell   2015 Apr 26, 9:55pm  

bob2356 says

So you are back where you started at? Hopefully you put the savings to work.

I put some into the stock market as soon as I heard that QE was a done deal. People should not be forced to play the markets in order to keep up with inflation though. Inflation is the only thing central banks actually deliver on. The CPI is worthless because it is no wonder that you see low/muted inflation for the broader basket after everything has been eaten up by raging inflation in the essentials (housing, healthcare, food and education/childcare). Hey, even gas prices are shooting up again.

17   lostand confused   2015 Apr 27, 5:19am  

Well, if you have an iphone, you can exchange it for a house in Detroit.

18   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 7:08am  

mell says

Absolutely 100%, because the jobs that survive and the new ones that are slowly created are the ones that are durable and add value, you will break the ever wilder boom bust cycle. Sound money is key.

lol--that is pure BS. A LOT of jobs that don't survive add more value than the ones that do survive. Sound money is a distraction like I said. It has absolutely nothing to do with the mess we're in. The boom-bust cycle we're in is because of wealth disparity. Fix that by going back to the policies and structure of the 1960s economy and we'll be fine.

mell says

Nope, in this globalized world you see inflation in goods that are easily shipped around the world within days. How was there deflation in 2008 then before the stick-save? The "structural imbalances" are created by the policies of the central banks and the government bailouts. If we had let 2008 play out, there wouldn't be 50% of every dollar be going to the top 10% right now.

There was deflation because people were defaulting on debt. If we let 2008 play out, the rich would have bought even more of the assets, so you're right--it wouldn't be 50% of every dollar going to the rich, it would probably be more like 60-70% of every dollar.

19   control point   2015 Apr 27, 8:40am  

Dan8267 says

True, currency debasement steals wealth from the poor and the middle class and gives it to the rich, but for the guy living paycheck-to-paycheck that doesn't matter because he has no savings.

Isn't this a contradiction? The rich, almost by definition, have all of the savings. If currency debasement destroys savings wealth, wouldn't it affect those with the most savings most, while affecting those with little (or no) savings least?

I generally agree with you but I have always scratched my head about your opinions on central banking and reconciling with your other thoughts.

20   dublin hillz   2015 Apr 27, 9:41am  

control point says

Isn't this a contradiction? The rich, almost by definition, have all of the savings. If currency debasement destroys savings wealth, wouldn't it affect those with the most savings most, while affecting those with little (or no) savings least?

Middle class has savings too and they would be crushed in high inflation environment. The working stiff while living check to check will still get hurt by inflation because their wages (especially when taxes are taken into account) will not keep up with increasing prices so cumulatively they will be worse off as time goes on. Meanwhile the rich have most of their wealth in stocks and will beat inflation anyway as they pass on price increases to customer. So middle class and the poor will get hurt the most in that world.

21   Dan8267   2015 Apr 27, 9:45am  

control point says

The rich, almost by definition, have all of the savings. If currency debasement destroys savings wealth, wouldn't it affect those with the most savings most, while affecting those with little (or no) savings least?

The flaw in your reasoning is that the rich have savings. They don't. They have assets. They own companies, factories, land, and other means of production. They don't have most of their wealth in currency, whether in a bank or not. So the rich aren't harmed by currency debasement like the middle class is. In fact, the rich are largely helped by currency debasement because

1. The rich have workers and those workers salaries are automatically decreased every day by currency debasement.
2. The rich own stocks who's purchasing power is automatically increased every day by currency debasement.

I suspect that if we changed one little aspect of our banking system, the vast majority of those supporting currency debasement would suddenly shift against it. Image if all the purchasing power redirected by currency debasement was redirected to the poor instead of banks. I.e., the poor received all the interest payments of loans given out by the Federal Reserve or given out by banks. Banks can charge a nominal fee for the work of performing and maintaining the loan, something that's very small.

P.S. I don't know who disliked your comment, but I voted thumbs up on it because it's always a good thing to rationally challenge a belief. Even if the challenge is wrong, it still provides insight through its rebuttal.

22   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 9:54am  

dublin hillz says

Middle class has savings too and they would be crushed in high inflation environment. The working stiff while living check to check will still get hurt by inflation because their wages (especially when taxes are taken into account) will not keep up with increasing prices so cumulatively they will be worse off as time goes on. Meanwhile the rich have most of their wealth in stocks and will beat inflation anyway as they pass on price increases to customer. So middle class and the poor will get hurt the most in that world.

That's not true. Whether wages keep up with inflation has pretty much nothing to do with the rate of inflation. It has everything to do with the relative strength of workers vs. owners. If you look at the 1970s high inflation era, workers did fine.

And the working stiff, living paycheck to paycheck, will have a higher percentage of debt that will be inflated away.

Inflation is a distraction.

23   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 10:00am  

Dan8267 says

The flaw in your reasoning is that the rich have savings. They don't. They have assets

Well, that's not really true. They have savings and assets. They have a diversified portfolio which almost certainly includes fixed income securities.

Dan8267 says

The rich have workers and those workers salaries are automatically decreased every day by currency debasement.

Like I said on the last post--workers real wages have very little relation to inflation. They are determined by supply and demand/relative power of workers vs. owners.

Dan8267 says

suspect that if we changed one little aspect of our banking system, the vast majority of those supporting currency debasement would suddenly shift against it. Image if all the purchasing power redirected by currency debasement was redirected to the poor instead of banks. I.e., the poor received all the interest payments of loans given out by the Federal Reserve or given out by banks. Banks can charge a nominal fee for the work of performing and maintaining the loan, something that's very small.

Inflation doesn't change purchasing power as long as the new money is distributed equally. The problem is that we have structural imbalances that are causing money to gravitate to the top rather than remain equally distributed. Rather than rail at something that makes no real difference (inflation)--you should be focusing the anger at the structural issues with the economy.

24   control point   2015 Apr 27, 10:10am  

Dan8267 says

The flaw in your reasoning is that the rich have savings. They don't. They have assets. They own companies, factories, land, and other means of production. They don't have most of their wealth in currency, whether in a bank or not. So the rich aren't harmed by currency debasement like the middle class is. In fact, the rich are largely helped by currency debasement because

Who has the savings then??? Who owns the debt? Savings = deferred compensation = debt. As tatu says, whether MOST (most added, mine) wages keep up with inflation has nothing to do with the rate of inflation. That is, the increase in aggregate wages IS inflation. That most wage earners are not earning an equal percentage of the wage pie is what makes increasing prices adversely affect them.

Uneven inflation is a sympton of changing wage distribution.

You would think that with the total disconnect observed over the last 8 years of currency level and price inflation, everyone would stop thinking that currency debasement has anything to do with inflation.

The recovery is sluggish because not enough demand was generated. We should be so lucky to generate jobs at the rate of the high inflation 70s.

20MM jobs created in the 70s vs. 20MM in the last 20 years.

25   justme   2015 Apr 27, 10:28am  

Dan8267 says

mell says

What happened is that the dollar has been devalued to the hilt and its devaluation

True, currency debasement steals wealth from the poor and the middle class and gives it to the rich, but for the guy living paycheck-to-paycheck that doesn't matter because he has no savings. So it still does not explain why the grandson can't live off his salary doing the same thing that his grandfather did and raised a family with.

I'll try to explain it: The problem is that nearly all of the extra dollars in public debt effectively end up first in the pockets of the 1%, and then in the assets owned by the 1%. Public debt, in the US, is in effect a mechanism for allowing lower taxes on the wealthy. For example, the long-term capital gains tax rate was limited to 15-20% at any level of regular income+gains from 1982 and most years thereafter until today, 33 years later. Employment income was taxed all the way up to 39.6%.

Said in another way, most of these new dollars, the cause of the "currency debasement" that people talk about, end up as property of the top 1%. This means that the top 1% end up owning a higher fraction of the total wealth . The bottom 99% now end up owning either nothing, or a house that cost so much to purchase that an ever increasing part of their stagnant-since-1980 income is consumed by the house.

I think that does explain why the grandpa of 2015 owns a house but the grandson cannot. The increasing debt, or "debasement" favors those who are already wealthy, and punishes those who are already poor.

26   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 10:40am  

justme says

Said in another way, most of these new dollars, the cause of the "currency debasement" that people talk about, end up as property of the top 1%. This means that the top 1% end up owning a higher fraction of the total wealth . The bottom 99% now end up owning either nothing, or a house that cost so much to purchase that an ever increasing part of their stagnant-since-1980 income is consumed by the house.

I think that does explain why the grandpa of 2015 owns a house but the grandson cannot. The increasing debt, or "debasement" favprs those who are already wealthy, and punishes those who are already poor.

Inflation keeps an unsustainable economy alive for longer by continuing to give the poor and middle class enough to live on. I guess you could argue that, long term, they would be better served by allowing the economy to implode. But that's not an argument I would make. I'd rather keep the economy alive in the small hope that Americans come to their senses and make the necessary changes.

27   Dan8267   2015 Apr 27, 11:02am  

control point says

Who has the savings then

The major banks own the debt, which is created out of thin air rather than by the actual money the banks have. This is the design and sole purpose of the fractional banking system. Like it or not, the banks generate loans that are ten times bigger than the actual money they hold, which is obtained from you and me.

Furthermore, the people saving up for a major purchase like a house or a car are disproportionately harmed by currency debasement. The top 1% are harmed far less, and arguable come out ahead because of currency debasement. The top 0.1% most certainly do. The poor would be helped by currency debasement if the interest on their loans weren't higher than the debasement rate, particularly credit card debt which is tied into debasement.

Please note that I'm talking specifically about currency debasement, not cost of living increases resulting partly from currency debasement. That's why I don't use the word inflation anymore. It's been thoroughly poisoned.

justme says

The problem is that nearly all of the extra dollars in public debt effectively end up first in the pockets of the 1%, and then in the assets owned by the 1%.

justme says

Said in another way, most of these new dollars, the cause of the "currency debasement" that people talk about, end up as property of the top 1%. This means that the top 1% end up owning a higher fraction of the total wealth . The bottom 99% now end up owning either nothing, or a house that cost so much to purchase that an ever increasing part of their stagnant-since-1980 income is consumed by the house.

Exactly. And that is the entire purpose of the modern banking system. Effectively, our banking system levies a huge tax on the working middle class and uses that tax, not to provide public services, but to increase the wealth of the top 0.1%.

This is the problem that no one wants to talk about. And if the return on the loans made through fractional lending were given to the poor as personal income, the bank lobbyists would be up in arms. Of course, no such bill would ever make it to the floor for a vote, nonetheless pass. No such discussion would even be allowed.

28   control point   2015 Apr 27, 11:08am  

Dan8267 says

The major banks own the debt,

And who owns the major banks?

29   Dan8267   2015 Apr 27, 11:31am  

A few thousand extremely rich people own most of the equity of the major banks, particularly the preferred shares, which is what really counts.

As to who owns the Federal Reserve, that's kept secret, but it's pretty obvious that it's the same people who own the major banks.

30   control point   2015 Apr 27, 11:56am  

Dan8267 says

A few thousand extremely rich people own most of the equity of the major banks, particularly the preferred shares, which is what really counts.

As to who owns the Federal Reserve, that's kept secret, but it's pretty obvious that it's the same people who own the major banks.

So all (most) of the savings is held by the banks which are owned by the rich. So how don't the rich have all (most) of the savings again?

Bottom line is total US credit market is almost 60T. Total market cap of US equities is 19T. Total value of US real estate is 26T. The rich own the highest % of debt, then equities, then real estate. Real estate and equities are positively affected by inflation, debt is negatively affected.

The highest % of the rich's wealth is OWNING debt. Devaluing this through inflation harms the debt owners. This affects the rich more than anyone else.

31   mell   2015 Apr 27, 12:05pm  

control point says

The highest % of the rich's wealth is OWNING debt. Devaluing this through inflation harms the debt owners. This affects the rich more than anyone else.

Absolutely false. The nominal value of assets and associated debt goes up while wages stay stagnant as the currency is debased, this is the worst deal for the ones owning the debt, esp. the new debtors. It would be far better to default and start over. The only point you can make is that current debtors who locked in a fixed rate (for housing mostly) would not suffer from this (though they still suffer from general inflation which will leave less for servicing debt), but that is pretty much the same thing as cheering on a pyramid/ponzi scheme as you NEED new debtors or you're screwed.

32   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 12:12pm  

mell says

The nominal value of assets and associated debt goes up while wages stay stagnant as the currency is debased

History shows this to be false. There is no data that I've seen that shows real wage growth is correlated with inflation rate(if anything, real wages tend to perform better under inflationary time periods as that often means labor has the upper hand). As Dan and others have stated, wages are determined by leverage.

mell says

though they still suffer from general inflation which will leave less for servicing debt

Wrong. Their wages will grow with inflation so the fixed debt is a smaller percentage of income. I won't even comment on your misguided use of Ponzi scheme yet again.

33   Dan8267   2015 Apr 27, 2:00pm  

control point says

So all (most) of the savings is held by the banks which are owned by the rich. So how don't the rich have all (most) of the savings again?

The rich own the banks. They don't keep their money there.

control point says

The rich own the highest % of debt, then equities, then real estate. Real estate and equities are positively affected by inflation, debt is negatively affected.

No bank loses money from currency debasement because the rate of debasement is always kept below the rate of interest charged to their customers. They may lose some profits, but not principle. Bankers are very good at ensuring that they are always coming out ahead under any monetary policy.

If banks actually lost purchasing power through currency debasement, then the Federal Reserve would never debase the currency. The Federal Reserve first and foremost serves the banks. Furthermore, the banking lobby is perhaps the strongest lobby in America. The government gives the banks whatever they want.

34   dublin hillz   2015 Apr 27, 2:14pm  

tatupu70 says

It has everything to do with the relative strength of workers vs. owners

Yes, that is extremely important; however inflation is the nails on a cross of the middle class and further exacerbates this power differential.

35   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 2:16pm  

dublin hillz says

Yes, that is extremely important; however inflation is the nails on a cross of the middle class and further exacerbates this power differential

What makes you say this? I have yet to see any data that supports this view.

36   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 2:18pm  

Dan8267 says

The rich own the banks. They don't keep their money there.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/100935856

"A separate study from Bank of America recently found that 56 percent of millionaires have a "substantial" amount of cash. Only 16 percent of them plan to invest that cash in the next couple of months. And only 40 percent plan to invest it over the next two years."

"According to research from American Express Publishing and Harrison Group, the savings rate of the wealthiest 1 percent soared to 37 percent in the second quarter. That's up from 34 percent in the second quarter of 2012—and more than three times their savings rate in 2007."

37   dublin hillz   2015 Apr 27, 2:22pm  

They will pass all price increases to the stiff. The middle class will get demoralized as their savings are worth less and they perceive societal pressure to consume to the max at the point of the gun. The wealthy with stocks have nothing to worry about as they will beat inflation guaranteed. Those with bonds funds will eventually see the funds buy new securities that yield higher or they will simply buy more and dollar cost average themselves out of a jam.

"What makes you say this? I have yet to see any data that supports this view."

38   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 2:29pm  

dublin hillz says

They will pass all price increases to the stiff

Actually corporations are already charging the profit maximizing price so any increases will reduce profits.

dublin hillz says

The middle class will get demoralized as their savings are worth less and they perceive societal pressure to consume to the max at the point of the gun. The wealthy with stocks have nothing to worry about as they will beat inflation guaranteed. Those with bonds funds will eventually see the funds buy new securities that yield higher or they will simply buy more and dollar cost average themselves out of a jam.

The middle class has as much (or more) debt as savings so they will be OK. Further, the spread between savings rates and inflation generally doesn't change much regardless of interest rate. When inflation rises, so do the rates paid on savings.

39   Dan8267   2015 Apr 27, 4:35pm  

tatupu70 says

"A separate study from Bank of America recently found that 56 percent of millionaires have a "substantial" amount of cash. Only 16 percent of them plan to invest that cash in the next couple of months. And only 40 percent plan to invest it over the next two years."

Millionaires? You think that mere millionaires are in the 0.1%? Your even more ignorant than I thought.

A billionaire is literally a thousand times as wealthy as a millionaire. It's a math thing.

40   tatupu70   2015 Apr 27, 4:51pm  

Dan8267 says

Millionaires? You think that mere millionaires are in the 0.1%? Your even more ignorant than I thought.

A billionaire is literally a thousand times as wealthy as a millionaire. It's a math thing.

lol. Dan--you realize that a billionaire is a subset of millionaires, right? Someone with 1000 millions is still a millionaire.

Besides--where did I say that I was talking about the 0.1%? Is that your definition of rich?

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