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The Fed's Bathtub Economics Brigade Blathers On, Part 1
Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,
In case you are wondering what the meaning of “some” is—-don’t bother. It’s just the same old Fed ritual incantation, chanted in 2/2 “cut time”. That means there are only two beats to each of its monthly meeting measures—–employment and inflation.
Like in the musical world, each beat is a half-note. But they might be better described as half-assed notes. The denizens of the Eccles Building are using BLS junk statistics to measure both variables. They don’t have a clue that they are rhythmically chanting a pretentious chorus about nothing more significant than short-run economic noise.
We got a load of evidence on that point with this weeks Q2 GDP release and the accompanying benchmark revisions reaching back to 2012. What these fresh reports show is that this “recovery” has been even more of a dud than was previously evident, and that the Fed’s monthly claims that the US economy is inching toward some kind of Keynesian full-employment nirvana are pure rubbish.
In fact, our monetary politburo is driving the US economy in the opposite direction. That is, toward dis-employment of its true, wealth-creating economic resources—–human labor, entrepreneurial talent and market driven gains in economic factor efficiency.
Contrary to yesterday’s self-congratulatory statement, all is not well and its not getting weller. Instead, what we really have is net business destruction, faltering investment in productive assets, massive unutilized and under-utilized labor hours, falsified capital market prices, grotesque mis-allocation of investable funds, euthanized savers, zombified business enterprises, rampant financial engineering, stock-option addicted C-suites, massive waste of VC capital and stupendous over-valuation of every asset class that can be monetized, manipulated or margined.
Indeed, if we step back from the Fed’s two-note incantations and monthly economy weather reports, what we get is a truly troubling trend in the US economy’s core metric. Namely, it appears that real final sales—-a serviceable aggregate measure which is free of transient inventory fluctuations—–have nearly ground to a halt.
To wit, today’s Q2 number of $16.2 trillion represents just a 1.03% annualized rate of gain from the $15.0 trillion level posted seven-and-one half years ago at the pre-crisis peak in Q4 2007. There is no 30-quarter business cycle expansion that tepid anywhere in modern history books; and even that anemic number requires you to believe that the 1.5%/year implicit price deflator used by the Washington statistical mills to calculate real final sales for this same period accurately measures inflation.
Down on main street actual inflation is far higher, meaning that the actual trend of real final sales growth is probably under 1% per annum.
As my colleague Lee Adler demonstrated yesterday, consumer inflation has consistently been in the 2-3% range when you adjust for real world rents alone—–and that is to say nothing of removing all the inflation-obfuscating gimmicks like hedonic adjustments, geometric means, basket substitution of spam for ham etc.
If rent were counted accurately, headline CPI would be 2.2%, year over year, not 1.2%. Core CPI (excluding food and energy) would be +3.1%, not 1.8%.
This means that in the very period since the Fed leapt into its money printing panic by slashing the discount rate in August 2007 at the first sign of cracks in the housing and credit bubble it had created, real economic expansion has slumped into a totally new realm. We now measure annual gains in fractions, not integers.
The significance of that is readily evident when the Fed’s recent handiwork is compared to previous 30-quarter business cycle expansions.
After the dotcom peak in Q2 2000, real final sales grew at a 2.1% annual rate through 2007. Likewise, during the 30-quarters after the mid-1990 peak, real final sales rose at a 3.0% annual rate. And during the equivalent period after the Q2 1981 peak in the Reagan era, real final sales expanded at a 3.5% rate.
So we are in the sub-basement of historical experience, and its not because the Great Recession was so deep, either. In fact, during the three years of rebound ending in Q2 2015, real final sales have grown at only 1.9% per annum. Yet during that time the monthly statements took endless bows for the Fed’s dexterity in divining precisely the “appropriate policy accommodation” to induce optimum macroeconomic performance.
In truth, it’s far worse. Despite all the mumbo-jumbo about its deft policy accommodation, the growth rate of real final sales during the last three years excluding health care and exports is actually only 1.6%. In a moment we will remind that the Fed’s frenetic money-pumping had nothing constructive to do with the more robust 2.7% growth rates in these latter two sectors, but the larger point is hard to miss.
Namely, that these three years (mid-2012 to mid-2015) should have constituted the blast-off phase of this business cycle if the Fed’s Keynesian ministrations were to earn any credit at all. But what we got by the Commerce Department’s own attestation was a fizzle —-an economy listing toward stall speed.
In this context, note the timeless scholasticism of the Fed’s latest statement. The US economy is again held to be slouching toward full-employment, but is still in need of a remedy——zero money market rates—–that once upon a time was thought to befit only a dire plunge in activity.
So someone needs to tell these academic scribblers that they have not outlawed the business cycle, and this one’s about over. As a matter of pure statistical averages, they are now rolling the dice. We are in month 74 since the official end of the recession, putting this expansion near the top of the post-war class, and that’s a problem in itself.
Until the turn of the century, the global economy was ordinarily a tailwind to US cyclical expansion because the rice paddies of Asia were still devoted to, well, rice. Likewise, the central banks of the outside world—typified by the Bundesbank—–would never have dreamed of stoking the kind of credit and asset investment binges that have emerged in the form of China’s red capitalism and its convoy of credit-addled raw materials and intermediate components suppliers.
So this US cycle expansion is being braced with torrential headwinds resulting from the deflationary bust that is gathering force all around the planet. Therefore instead of obsessing about its purported data-driven acuity, the monetary politburo might better focus on the facts of the calendar and the storm-clouds gathering all about the continental horizons.
It might also look at a powerful economic vector that it never, ever blathers about in its meeting statements. Namely, the state of domestic inventories.
For crying out loud, they are screaming that the cycle end is near.

So what has the Fed actually accomplished during these last seven years of furiously pumping “aggregate demand” in order to fill the US economy to its full employment brim? Spoiler alert: Virtually nothing where its ZIRP and easy money “accommodation” might logically make a difference.
Consider three components of personal consumption expenditure—-purportedly the driving force that makes the Keynesian world go round. During the last 30 quarters, nominal spending on medical services has risen at a 4.1% annual rate compared to 2.1% for non-durable goods and 1.8% for durable goods.
Now that’s exactly backwards! Were the Fed’s flood of cheap money actually being transmitted to main street, durables should be booming, the credit card spigot should be goosing non-durable spending and health care shouldn’t matter. That’s because people don’t borrow to go to the hospital—–even if they sometimes end up buried in debt after they get the bill.
Stated differently, the health care sector is driven by the public treasury and now the Obamacare mandates, not central bank induced borrowing and spending. In fact, the only debt expansion in the health care industry has been the massive borrowings used to fund M&A deals—–that is, to recycle cash to Wall Street speculators and the sliver of society that owns most of the financial assets.
Yes, I have used nominal dollar values in this comparison, and deliberately so. Monetary policy does not work through some magical ether called “aggregate demand”. If it works at all, it does so through the credit channel of policy transmission, and credit advances always and everywhere come in nominal terms, not deflated hunks of 2009 real dollars as parsed by the Commerce Department.
In the Keynesian scheme of things, households are induced to spend beyond the limits of their current production and income by accessing cheap and plentiful credit. But they do so in nominal terms. What matters is not the deflated dollar value of a new living room furniture set, resort vacation or new SUV. In the case of debt-induced consumption spending, what actually matters is the monthly debt service payment on credit card advances or installment loans
And it is on this very point that the aggregate demand stimulators at the Fed have been futilely shouting at the economic waves. By the eve of the great financial crisis, the overwhelming bulk of middle class households had become tapped out from an income carrying capacity perspective after 30-years of a steady upward ratcheting of household leverage ratios.
As is made dramatically clear in the chart below, household leverage peaked at 220% of wage and salary income in 2008 and has now rolled-over. Accordingly, it is self-evident that cheap mortgages and other forms of household credit expansion were a one-time parlor trick.
Once the central bank got households leveraged up to “peak debt” there was no more artificial spending power to induce. The Fed’s blather about “policy accommodation” in the form of ZIRP and QE had virtually no impact on household consumption spending—-other than in the special case of the sub-prime auto credit explosion that was driven by the scramble for yield among fund managers and the recruitment of marginal, previously uncreditworthy borrowers into auto finance.
The Fed’s money pumping also failed on the business side of the economy. As will be shown in Part 2, business credit has been massively channeled into financial engineering in the form of stock buybacks, M&A deals and LBOs. Here the Fed’s monetary “accommodation” has actually impaired the supply side of the economy and thwarted the essential process of creative destruction.
The end result has been the inflation and redistribution of existing financial assets to the top of the economic ladder, and the strip-mining of business balance sheets to pay for it. The growing presence of windfall rents on Wall Street and debt-laden zombie companies on main street, in fact, has been a principal contributor to the stall speed trends evident in this week’s GDP release.
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I'm back ????
You can see a real dash for trash right now, biotechs, Netflix, Tesla, Chipotle etc, they really believe these can never go down.
Lion meat from an 'old' animal was recently served at Zimbabwe dictator Robert Mugabe's birthday, without any social media outrage. What gives?
http://tinyurl.com/paqpmxl
All that matters is the price of pussy
Can the Fed really be soooo stupid??? Seems unlikely but their models and course of action would be entirely different if their goal was to "fix" the problems. Thus, pretty clear their goals are "elsewhere".
Consider the following is data the Fed must have and truly attempt to ignore...
http://econimica.blogspot.com/2015/07/federal-reserves-therapy-has-nothing-to.html
http://econimica.blogspot.com/2015/07/growth-and-recession-now-unrecognizable.html
You were gone ?
How could we tell the difference ?
I'm kinda like herpes, you forget about me when I'm not around.
Yes. And Morticia is waiting in the kitchen.
The tactic of collapsing the world so investors run to the US markets is ending.
This is the last time.
My only recommendation is if you live in any of the blue places http://www.dumpaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/pictures-2719.jpg get out now......
Vegas will be fine...if you are rich...and well armed.
And don't run out of food and water....
Vegas. Water?? Uh-oh!!!!
The trick to controlling inflation is keeping people unemployed...
All we need are crooks on Wall Street.... They can make any fraud...GOLD! We don't need companies making this....just traders to make money...then let it fail.
You ever get the feeling that our economy is like being on a cruise ship going down the Niagra River from Erie to Ontario, pilot'd by a captian trained on the Mississippi River making his first run downstream there. He doesn't hear the screamin' and yellin' coming from the riverbank tryin' to tell him what's ahead. He just smiles back.
Unfortunatley they know exactly what they are doing.
This is the final wash, and last rinse cycle before the machine implodes under
the weight of debt piled on it.
can stockman run for president...he would be better than what I have seen so far
If Stockman really knew what was happening he would not be surprised....nor would he believe anything could be done about it.
All these politicians yapping about what 'needs to be done' are fools.
Only someone screaming 'run for your lives' truly understands when the economy is headed. There is no 'fix'. There is no 'better plan'.
Run for your lives...into gold.
Looks like "further improvement" to me!
Fuck this country
"So what has the Fed actually accomplished during these last seven years of furiously pumping “aggregate demand” in order to fill the US economy to its full employment brim? Spoiler alert: Virtually nothing where its ZIRP and easy money “accommodation” might logically make a difference.
Consider three components of personal consumption expenditure—-purportedly the driving force that makes the Keynesian world go round. During the last 30 quarters, nominal spending on medical services has risen at a 4.1% annual rate compared to 2.1% for non-durable goods and 1.8% for durable goods.
Now that’s exactly backwards! Were the Fed’s flood of cheap money actually being transmitted to main street, durables should be booming, the credit card spigot should be goosing non-durable spending and health care shouldn’t matter. That’s because people don’t borrow to go to the hospital—–even if they sometimes end up buried in debt after they get the bill.
Stated differently, the health care sector is driven by the public treasury and now the Obamacare mandates, not central bank induced borrowing and spending. In fact, the only debt expansion in the health care industry has been the massive borrowings used to fund M&A deals—–that is, to recycle cash to Wall Street speculators and the sliver of society that owns most of the financial assets."
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Thank you for that!
The thing to remember is that as long as the man in the street plays along there is no chance of anything changing for the better...
...And the man in the street won't react until the supply lines break. Even an overnight devaluation of the USD by 50% like the kind Jim Willie talks about will be met with a shrug at first and then later on vicous anger directed at a Dennys waitress for jacking the price of a Moons Over MyHammy. There is no chance Janet Yellen gets blamed or people start buying gold or bitcoins as a show of disgust.
Just accept it and do your best to mentally "check out". See yourself as a tourist on an extended stay in the west. "Hey your pension funds are being raided, I'd keep an eye on that if I were you, but its not my country" is the attitude to go for.
Otherwise you are going to end up an alchoholic going from one episode of "OK, the public fucking HAS TO catch on this time" to another. Look at Greece, Ireland, The Swiss, Japan etc if you don't believe me.
Buy a little gold in case they lose control, then convert as much of your paper/digital weatlh as possible into real stuff and then try to secure a source of income for your golden years knowing your promised pensions won't be there or that they will be taxed into oblivion or that they won't buy much. The Big Truth isn't gonna hit the masses here. Ever.
You are living among the first generation of Post Americans. Get right with it.
"aggregate demand" ... and government back stopping.
why must it be deficit spending?
Savings for a rainy day is vilified because it precludes interest flowing to the banks for doing nothing but possessing the issuing power.
on a planet of finite energy and resources no system can grow forever, and instead of a debt jubilee reset it seems the bankers and their confederates have settled on massive wars to cover the flaw in the system.
The Fed operates in a system that, we must remind ourselves, is a man made religion. It's not physics.
It's closer to Dungeons and Dragons.
Why are they in charge of anything?
The real problem is that if the Fed 'let nature take it's course...the dollar would be dead. They choose to act and delay that event because heads will roll and they did not want the heads to be theirs.
We are getting what we should have expected. Hell no it is not good. The worst was delayed...but only delayed. When we get the collapse we can know ...but it is waiting, probaly just around the corner.
To have expected the Fed to do nothing and watch a deflationary collapse in 2008 is unrealistic. We would have had everyone, including David, hollering for them to do something.
We must pay for our sins. Most would rather be punished later rather than sooner.
Yes, it's a weak GDP print histrorically. But in a global environment that's recessionary, 2.3 is pretty damn good.
Thinking Fed or any other policy can get the U.S. economy running at 3.5 percent, when the rest of the world is staring at deflation, is a bit silly.
We're just going to have to ride this one out.
The politicians in Washington D.C. are pigs. They are not part of the human race that I am part of. You have a planet full of decent people, mostly good people, and then you have the pigs, the military, the bankers, the criminals, murderers, the embarassing part of the world, the asshole in Washington D.C. and there you have Lloyd Blankfein's head with a shit eating grin popping out of the asshole. This is a global problem that has to be resolved.
The Fed's role is to chant the monetary dogma they are given and implement the policies of the banking clans. Logically analyzing their failures, or reviewing the dicordant mental gymnastics they use to reconcile actions & dogma is as useless as etymogically analyzing the squawks of a parrot.
While the sounds seem like words there is no real communication there.
To the extent they think, they think about social dynamics and reinforcing orthodoxy.