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elleng

(136,080 posts)
Fri Apr 29, 2022, 08:20 PM Apr 2022

by Robert Reich Warning: The Fed is aiming a battering ram at the American economy.

The result is likely to be a recession.

As Putin’s war shakes up the world economy, the Fed last week raised interest rates by a quarter point and penciled in six more increases by the end of the year. Fed Chair Jerome Powell says he’s ready to do whatever it takes to bring inflation down, including following the example of his predecessor Paul Volcker, who increased interest rates to 20 percent in 1981.

Volcker’s rate rise triggered a deep recession and double-digit unemployment. We can debate whether that harsh medicine in 1981 was necessary. What should be clear is that the current inflation is nothing like the inflation of the late 1970s — a time when nearly a quarter of all private-sector workers were unionized and American corporations couldn’t easily outsource production. Today, only 6 percent of private-sector workers are unionized — which means workers have almost no long-term bargaining leverage. And today American corporations can outsource almost anywhere (although China is becoming more complicated, and Russia is now off limits).

Inflation is running almost 8 percent annually, which is surely a problem. But it’s not due to permanent wage or price hikes. In fact, it has nothing to do with the business cycle. So expecting the Federal Reserve to remedy today’s inflation by raising interest rates to slow the economy is like trying to cool off on a hot day by aiming a battering ram at your head. Wrong diagnosis. Wrong remedy. The current inflation is the consequence of a perfect storm of unique events that won’t recur — and won’t be remedied by higher rates.

We’re emerging from a once-a-century pandemic during which much of the world economy closed down. In March through May 2020, demand evaporated as people retreated into their homes. Because the nation’s (and world’s) productive capacity couldn’t be closed down all at once (productive capacity includes factories, offices, warehouses, and so on, all of which take a while to wind down), the resulting excess of supply over demand caused a deep recession.

Now, at the other end, and without much opportunity to buy for the last two years, American consumers are flush with cash (the national savings rate is at its highest level in decades). So they want to buy lots of stuff (and they haven’t yet gone back to spending much on services such as restaurants, hotels, air travel, movies and other places where COVID reigned for two years). Yet the nation’s (and the world’s) productive capacity can’t be fully operational all at once. The resulting excess of demand over supply is causing major inflation.'>>>

https://robertreich.substack.com/p/be-warned-the-fed-is-aiming-a-battling?

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Budi

(15,325 posts)
6. No doubt. Reich was a fellow on the Sanders Institute, along with
Fri Apr 29, 2022, 08:40 PM
Apr 2022

...Nina Turner & Tulsi Gabbard.

 

Budi

(15,325 posts)
5. "Americans are flush with cash"...??
Fri Apr 29, 2022, 08:38 PM
Apr 2022

Maybe in Reich's eschelon of society, but no one in the better part I know of believe they are 'flush with cash'..perhaps pre-Trump they would have considered themselves to be secure but not since 2017 nor especially the end of 2019 on.

I don't know exactly what part of our society he's talking about.

Ramble on..

progree

(11,463 posts)
8. "Flush with Cash" - The Personal Savings Rate was elevated during the pandemic
Fri Apr 29, 2022, 09:58 PM
Apr 2022

Should has said "relatively" . Anyway I think that's the basis of his "flush with cash" comment; I've seen similar terms in various media reports too.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT

but I see it's back down to about the average of the last few pre-pandemic years



Particularly with the expiration of the enhanced child tax credit and the enhanced earned income credits that expired at the end of 2021 if I'm not mistaken. (The stimulus checks and enhanced unemployment benefits have been long gone).

Date range of the graph: 11/5/92 to March 2022. Latest value: 6.2%. The personal savings rate is also part of the Personal Consumption / Personal Income / PCE report linked to in the OP.

ymetca

(1,182 posts)
10. I'll quibble a bit with this part:
Fri Apr 29, 2022, 10:35 PM
Apr 2022
The current inflation is the consequence of a perfect storm of unique events that won’t recur — and won’t be remedied by higher rates.


The second part is probably correct, but I sincerely doubt the first part.

We appear to be in the final Disaster Capitalism phase now, because the planet is melting and the permafrost is rebirthing ancient viruses, and we're all gonna be running from wildfires, floods, pestilence and famine. And our leaders are either dithering or burying their heads in the sand.

I can hardly wait for the Nestle bottled water wars of 2050, aren't you?

progree

(11,463 posts)
11. There's a big hole in the Fed's theory of inflation --- incomes are falling at a record 10.9% rate
Sat Apr 30, 2022, 08:31 PM
Apr 2022

(that's after adjusting for inflation)

There’s a big hole in the Fed’s theory of inflation —- incomes are falling at a record 10.9% rate, Marketwatch, 4/30/22
(no paywall, its an msn.com link -Progree)

The most concerning thing about Thursday’s report on U.S. gross domestic product for the first quarter wasn’t that the first line of the first table showed that real GDP fell at a 1.4% annual rate. It was the little-noticed news on line 34 showing that real disposable incomes fell for a fourth straight quarter.

Over the last four quarters, the purchasing power of after-tax household incomes plunged by $2.2 trillion (in 2021 dollars). That’s a 10.9% decline, by far the largest in the records dating back to 1947.

Of course, the decline in incomes is merely the unwinding of the massive support that households received from the government in 2020 and 2021 via direct pandemic stimulus payments, the child tax credit, and enhanced benefits for unemployment insurance, food stamps and Medicaid, and more.

. . . But the Fed is determined to quash demand. That’s what raising interest rates is all about: Slowing demand in an overheated economy by raising the costs of borrowing. ((the article argues that quashing demand when inflation-adjusted incomes are falling like this is only going to make incomes fall more -Progree))

. . . The prospect for stagflation—low growth with high inflation—is real. “The appropriate solution to inflation would be to work to alleviate supply-side constraints,” say Nersisyan and Wray. To do that, unfortunately, “we need more domestic investment, not less.”

More: https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/there-s-a-big-hole-in-the-fed-s-theory-of-inflation-incomes-are-falling-at-a-record-10-9-rate/ar-AAWHEFQ?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=15f1a5a79a714edd9e40436aeb6fdd32


The Personal Income Report he is referring to is at:
https://www.bea.gov/news/2022/personal-income-and-outlays-march-2022
The full release with all the tables is at: https://www.bea.gov/sites/default/files/2022-04/pi0322.pdf

I can't find the Line 34 data he is talking about. But in Line 46 of Table 2 of pi0322.pdf, it has

Disposable Personal Income, Total, billions of chained (2012) dollars: quarterly,

2020 Q4: 15,443.0,   2021 Q1: 17,221.6,   Q2: 15,805.6,   Q3: 15,640.0,   Q4: 15,418.0,   2022 Q1: 15,339.2

And yes, there are 4 straight quarters of decline, and 2022 Q1 over 2021 Q1 is a 10.9% decline:

(2022 Q1 / 2021 Q1 - 1) * 100% : (15,339.2 / 17,221.6 - 1) * 100 = -10.93%

Table 2 Line 22 "Government social benefits to persons" shows a huge amount in 2021 Q1 relative to the preceding and following quarters.

Future such comparions of quarterly real disposable income vs. the same quarter a year ago will likely be much less dramatic declines, with the unusual 2021 Q1 falling out of the comparison. For example, comparing 2022 Q1 to 2021 Q2 (that's the last 3 quarters) is

(2022 Q1 / 2021 Q2 - 1) * 100% : (15,339.2 / 15,805.6 - 1) * 100 = -2.95% (-3.91% annualized)

2022 Q1 vs. 2021 Q4 (one quarter) is a 0.51% decline (-2.07% annualized)

but its still in the wrong direction, just not so apocalyptic.
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