Friday, October 1, 2010
Ups, Downs, Tops, Bottoms -- Who You Are
Friday, September 17, 2010
Not Just Me
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Numbers
Friday, August 6, 2010
Deflationary Cold Sore Cream -- Rock Bottom Prices
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Nipponification?
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
For the Record
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
More on Deflation - Daniel Gross
I like reading Daniel Gross, but he's been mailing it in for about five months now. Probably fatigue from peddling his book. But, now he's just getting sloppy.
Economists generally agree that deflation is a widespread fall in prices, as measured by the consumer price index (CPI).
That economists generally agree on anything is news to me. Deflation has many definitions. Some would argue that there are multiple species of deflation.
For example, there is the phenomenon of debt deflation -- where credit was extended far and wide without proper risk assessment. Always this leads to creditors chasing too many debtors who cannot pay. Always this chokes the supply of money from lenders to borrowers.
There is also the type of deflation referenced by Gross, whereby prices of things go down in a domestic market. Price deflation can result from innovation (things being made cheaper) or from oversupply. Price declines from innovation are different from price declines from oversupply. For example, precision machining may lead to fewer error rates in a manufacturing process, which benefits the manufacturer's bottom line by reducing the cost of production. Some of that savings is passed on to consumers. Some is gobbled up as profit, depending on the level of competition in the industry. Suppliers to the manufacturer see no net change, unless the lowered price leads to greater demand -- in which case suppliers may see a benefit to the innovation-driven price decline. Maybe jobs will be created.
Price declines from oversupply are a bad deal for the companies selling the product. For example, many areas have too many houses right now. This means homes can be bought for cheap (especially with interest rates set to prevent a worsening of the depression). It also means many sellers are taking a loss. It also means home builders have to build fewer homes than planned. This means the suppliers to the builders will take a hit. People will get laid off.
There are other forms of deflation, too, such as an insufficient level of money printing. Or the decline of derivatives creation.
My guess is that we are in a state of multiple layers of deflation. Debt deflation, price declines from oversupply, and a complete derivatives Armageddon. One could make the case that the printing presses are not running at capacity, either. I know DeLong and Krugman would agree. So would Martin Wolf.
As for price declines from innovation, this is where it gets tricky. A lot of the innovation we have seen in the past fifteen years has actually been a political and economic innovation: globalism. Really, shunting off manufacturing to
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Indeflation, or Indigestion?
Monday, June 14, 2010
Bilderberg Update
The Conference will deal mainly with Financial Reform, Security, CyberHere is what I expected they would discuss:
Technology, Energy, Pakistan, Afghanistan, World Food Problem, Global Cooling,
Social Networking, Medical Science, EU-US relations.
- Debt deflation
- Spain
- Greece
- Turkey
- Maintaining European competitive advantage against emerging economies
- Social decline of the west
The two topics that surprise me are "medical science" and "global cooling." To be honest, seeing these listed made my skin crawl. Why in the hell would these people want to discuss about medical science? I don't see it, unless it's in the context of health care costs and the untenable welfare state. And, global cooling? Is there something we should know?
I wonder who's job it was to explain Twitter to Henry Kissinger . . .
Friday, June 4, 2010
Bilderburg 2010
- Debt deflation
- Spain
- Greece
- Turkey
- Maintaining European competitive advantage against emerging economies
- Social decline of the west
- Debt deflation
- Russian integration into the European economy (you know, because the failure to do so allowed WWI to happen)
- Alternative energy, i.e., anything but Middle Eastern oil
- Finding buyers for European and American goods, i.e., JOBS!