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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Showing posts with label Recession. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recession. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2022

A World on Fire

By   @ Brownstone Institute

Every day, news reporters, traders, and workers of all sorts the world over wake to do their work as they always have. Part of that requires that everyone pretend that life is normal, fixable, and more or less stable. All of this is temporary. It will come and go and really not be that bad. 

Strange, isn’t it? Human beings have a hard time adjusting to disaster, in their decision-making and even in their mindset. Reporters have to do their jobs as they are trained. Traders too. Everyone does. They please their bosses. They don’t sound alarms. They don’t scream and yell as they probably should. 

But there is a moment in the day when the work is done and perhaps a cocktail comes out or the dishes are washed and the kids are in bed and the room falls silent. At this moment, millions and billions of people the world over know it. Disaster is all around us. We are just pretending otherwise, simply because this is what we have to do. 

It was this way during lockdowns. They must know what they are doing otherwise why would we be forced to do this. If we all do our part, maybe this will end sooner rather than later. The experts surely know better than we do what is what. What can we do but trust?

Let us adjust and find a way to normalize all of this in our minds. We are powerless to change it in any case. 

And thus the peoples of the world adjusted and will continue to do so as the fundamentals decay and rot, long past the end of lockdowns and most vaccine mandates, even as all the old rituals and signals of life as we once knew it fade further into memory. 

Enough with the dreary existentialism. Let’s talk about life in a one-bedroom apartment in London. The price of energy for heat has nearly doubled, seemingly overnight. Truly, it took months but it has felt like one day to the next. The energy bills will be approaching a substantial portion of the rent itself. And the forecast — which one has to do because that’s how energy markets work on the consumer end — is showing a doubling and doubling again. 

Here is what Goldman Sachs is seeing. 

Small businesses cannot function under these conditions. “Tom Kerridge, the celebrity chef, revealed that the annual energy bill at his pub has soared from £60,000 to £420,000 and warned that ‘ludicrous’ price rises left the hospitality sector facing a ‘terrifying landscape’,” reports Telegraph. 

This is all running wildly ahead of consumer prices generally. This is only through June. We are already approaching 100% inflation in energy. 

Many will need to close up shop. The new Prime Minister Liz Truss, who calls herself a conservative, has capped price increases for consumers while pushing the largest spending bill to bail out energy companies ever. It truly seems like she had no choice. Yes, that’s what they all say, but in this case, it might be true simply because otherwise, the entire nation would totally fall apart. 

It could happen anyway. 

“The U.K. may be facing a wave of business bankruptcies exceeding anything witnessed during the post-2008 panic and recession,” reports Joseph Sternberg. “Some 100,000 firms could be forced into insolvency in coming months, bankruptcy consultancy Red Flag Alert warned this week. These are otherwise healthy firms with at least £1 million in annual revenue. Business failures on this scale would dwarf the roughly 65,000 firms of any size that went under from 2008-10.”

Everyone wants to know why. As always, there are a number of factors. The sanctions on Russia for its struggle over the borders of Ukraine were ill-advised. That has never stopped the deployment of such tactics: sanctions against Cuba still in force began 60 years ago, all in an effort to make some foreign state behave in a way that the US demands. 

They have driven up the price of energy all over Europe and the UK. But even then, Russian sources only about 3% of the UK’s energy needs. 

Another culprit is the fanatical attempt on the part of the government to convert a fossil-fuel economy to one powered by the wind and sun. For reasons of climate change, we know how good politicians are at controlling the global climate by taking away your consumer conveniences. 

But really even these two factors would not be enough to cause this level of carnage. The real root of the problem is monetary, which in turn traces (again!) to lockdown policies: the wild currency debasement starting March 2020 and continuing through lockdowns has wrecked the place. How could they not see this coming? It’s ridiculous. 

And it happened the world over. The chart below that I put together looks messy but it tells the whole story of how one generation of central bankers wrecked the world. The key on the left tells you monetary inflation rates and the key on the right tells you price inflation rates. One lags the other by 16-18 months. I’ve color-coded it so that you can see the relationships. 

This covers the U.S. (green), the EU (red), and the UK (blue). You can see the massive oceans of paper being pumped out to cover up for the egregious evil of lockdowns. Do you remember those days when governments the world over imagined that they could somehow shut things down while keeping the data looking pretty with the printing press? 

How Quickly Things Fall Apart 

My friends in the UK are truly panicked. They want to come to the U.S. just to get away. But many of my friends are rebels and did not accept the vaccine because they are healthy and under the age of 80. They rejected the jab. Now they cannot come to the U.S. because the U.S. is still imposing rules that forbid travelers from foreign countries who are not vaccinated from getting across the borders. 

These policies again trace to the lockdown era: March 12, 2020, in particular, when the office of the president decided on its own to do the unthinkable and shut travel from Europe, UK, Australia, and New Zealand. It caused family disruption, business loss, and tragedy all around. It is still not normalized, which makes the point: no one in Washington has any regrets. 

This is the essence of policy in America today. Truly people are being locked out of our country for being insufficiently loyal to Pfizer, which seems to be the real government here at home, at least as it pertains to public health. 

The most striking feature of that which afflicts the UK today is the sheer speed of it all. One day life was normal and then suddenly the bills were through the roof. No one could explain why. It was some kind of mystery, and extremely disorienting. 

Why energy, for example? Well, inflation strikes in strange ways. It gravitates to the thing most vulnerable to price hikes. This could be dictated by fashion or policy or both. But when it happens, no power can stop it. 

The story of going from normal to double and triple prices, forecasting to go much higher, reminds me of books I’ve read about Weimar, how things were fine until suddenly they were not and life itself took a shocking turn. 

Until recently, Americans have looked at the chaos abroad and thought oh that’s what these weird foreign people do, just strange stuff with unstable governments and unsound financial systems. And yet right now it is happening to our mirror country across the pond, a place that Americans think of as cousins with a Royal family. 

The remarkable thing is that the UK’s monetary policy was not as bad as the U.S.’s own. The only difference is that there is a larger international market for dollars than for pounds. This allows the Fed a bit of breaking room to do more damage. 

But can it happen here? Yes, certainly, and it could happen before year’s end. The policies of the last three years have created an incredible powder keg. No one knows when it will go off, and no one knows what to do when it happens. 

There are so many other data points: missing workers, food shortages, political instability, and the breathtaking entrenchment of Xi-backed lockdowns in China. 

The world is on fire. Most people are not willing to think about it or talk about it. Yet. 

Author

  • Jeffrey A. Tucker, Founder and President of the Brownstone Institute, is an economist and author. He has written 10 books, including Liberty or Lockdown, and thousands of articles in the scholarly and popular press. He writes a daily column on economics at The Epoch Times, and speaks widely on topics of economics, technology, social philosophy, and culture.

 

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Wordplay Won’t Change Economic Reality

If the administration and their amen corner in the Washington press corps keep insisting the economy is just fine, they will annihilate what little credibility they have left. 

By July 28, 2022 

On January 21, 2008, the first day of the final year of George W. Bush’s presidency, the Associated Press predicted a recession just as the presidential election was heating up. The story defined recession “as an outright contraction of economic activity and employment lasting at least six months.” 

In June 2019, as another heated presidential race was just getting underway, Politico reported “Manufacturing as measured by the Federal Reserve has declined for two straight quarters, the technical definition of recession.” 

In 2008, the AP got it right. In 2019, Politico got it wrong because it had manipulated the definition of a recession to fit a political purpose. A recession is not the decline of manufacturing but of all economic output. The United States was not in a recession that year. ...........To Read More...

 Political Cartoons by Gary Varvel

 Democrat Logic: Reduce Inflation with More Inflation! - August 3, 2022 By John Green -What could be dumber than spending $433B that we don't have during an inflation crisis? Raising taxes by $739B during a recession, that's what.  Could anything be less economically sound than doing either of those two things?Yup!The Dems are about to give us a real demonstration of cluelessness.They're about to do both of those things together — having the most negative impact on the economy achievable by mere mortal men.And they're going to do it while Americans are screaming that the economy is our biggest concern right now.  So are the Democrats.............The Dems are beyond excited about having a bunch more of our money to spend on their socialist schemes.   Politico is even giddy, celebrating that Biden is back.................

 Political Cartoons by AF Branco


Monday, June 20, 2022

Inflation or Recession? Yes!

 By Rich Kozlovich
 
I subscribe to John Mauldin's Thoughts From the Frontline which does extensive research on economic outcomes and good investing, often filling the articles with statistics, charts and econo-babble that easily make my eyes roll up into the back of my head.  Even with all this, I subscribe for two reasons.  I can still come away with an understanding of what he says and why he says it, and the subscription is free, so I recommend it. 
 
He posted this piece, Gradually Worse, on June 18th, and I thought it was very worthwhile discussing whether or not this inflationary trend will continue, and if this will all lead to a recession.  His view is all this depends on what the FED does saying:
 
This time last year, the great debate was whether inflation would be “transitory.” That question is now settled (Narrator: “It wasn’t transitory at all.”), we have moved on to debating what the Federal Reserve will do about it… and can do about it.

The experts at the Strategic Investment Conference fell into two camps: The Fed will move either a) too fast and spark a deep recession, or b) too slow and let inflation get much worse. (There's a theoretical chance the Fed finds a perfect path in between, but I don't know anyone who seriously expects it.) That means we are heading somewhere unpleasant; the only question is what kind of unpleasantry we'll get.

My own opinion "admittedly in hindsight" is that inflation was already out of control before the debate even started. ............Jerome Powell's team kept emergency measures in place long after the emergency (at least the economic part of it) ended.

Now here's the part most people will cringe at.  He believes recession is preferable to inflation, and the fix to inflation.  Historically we must understand that recessions and depressions are the economic fix, and if left alone they hit bottom forcing people to make changes from what's being done to making the necessary corrections that lay the foundation for recovery, and now the FED raising interest rates is the start of that fix.  

He clearly feels this is what must be done, and I agree, which doesn't mean much other than I understand the history surrounding recessions and depressions having read extensively on how the stock market crash of 1929 started a recession, and might have been finished in two years, except for government interference by Hoover, and far more massive interference and out of control spending by Roosevelt turned it into the Great Depression, where the unemployment rate averaged 15 percent from around 1930/31 to 1942. 

Before the stock market crashed in 1929 the unemployment rate was around or under 2%.  After it crashed it only went up to 8%.  Most people didn't own stocks in those days, it was Hoover's Smoot Hawley Tariff bill that shot unemployment up to 15%, and in the next ten years it ranged from 9% to 25%, averaging 15%.

I remember the recession of the 70's and according to Mauldin we're now reaching the pain of that period involving the cost of the "four categories a typical household has little ability to control: utilities, gasoline, food at home, and electricity", and it must be understood any numbers shown by government entities using the Consumer Price Index to demonstrate otherwise is because they've changed how they calculate all this stuff making comparisons difficult, but that doesn't change reality.  Washington developed a system to lie to you about inflation.  The real inflation rate is much, much higher.    An apple is an apple and calling it a pear doesn't make it so. 
 
There are a lot of comparisons between what's happening now and in the 1970's, and while there were multiple factors involved (Including two stunningly incompetent Presidents, then and now) energy was at the heart of it then and it's the heart of it now, which his article covers with all the charts, the history (which is interesting for those who haven't read about this) and econo-babble that explains it.  But here's the thrust of his piece.  Inflation is here, it's not going away, or as Biden calls it "transitory", and there will be a recession, the only unanswered questions are how bad and for how long.  
 
The price of homes is dropping, and one thing I think I can assure everyone is the price of housing is going to drop like a stone.  Mortgage interest rates have doubled, and I think it's clear that's the tip of the iceberg.
 
Between the folly of all these covid restrictions, and pandemic hysteria, job losses and business closings, all completely unnecessary, these lost jobs and businesses are not returning any time soon, and now we have sudden adult death syndrome.  Clearly being caused by all these false vaccines, which in my view is our thalidomide era, only far worse as this is going to impact the heath of billions for decades to come, not to mention the economic impact this will cause.  We're looking at long term negative economic and social consequences. 
 
Spending at the federal and state levels was out of control before, and as hard as it is to believe, spending and the demand for new taxes has spiraled out of control possibly beyond fixing, and we now have a 30 trillion dollar national debt.  People will not be buying homes in spite of the massive decreases in the price of houses.  

He concludes with these thoughts.  When comparing a hard attack on inflation, which causes a great deal of economic pain but restores normalcy more quickly, and the gradual attack on inflation, which carries the problem of long term "gradual" pain that can lead to far more pain than can't be planned for as was the case in the 70's, saying: 

 “Economic life is subject to all sorts of surprises and disturbances—business recessions, labor unrest, foreign troubles, monopolistic shocks, elections, and governmental upsets. One or another such development, especially a business recession, could readily overwhelm and topple a gradualist timetable for curbing inflation. That has happened in the past and it may happen again.”

None of this analysis is encouraging when you have an administration full of strange incompetents who've reached peak Peter Principle levels of incompetence and intellectual corruption, along with a host of other radical appointees, but it goes far beyond incompetence.   We are now a nation being led by lost worshipers at the secular neo-pagan alter of leftism, wandering in a moral wilderness following concepts that have been proven failures forever.
 
“We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion . . . Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”  John Adams, 1798
 
Couple that with even worse levels of incompetence and corruption of a Congress being run by a party not one trusts, and being controlled by Pelosi and Schumer, both of whom believe huge spending increases is what will fix the economy.  
 
Along with increasing taxes, more regulations, destroying the ability to drill for oil which has taken us from an energy independent nation and exporter to a nation with shortages causing huge increases in the cost of gasoline, pushing utterly insane and destructive "green" energy policies.  Policies that seriously effect the poorest members of society, even threatening the nation with black outs this summer.  
 
Are we really surprised all this is causing high food prices and shortages?   We're seeing being put into effect the usual pattern of leftist governments.  Oppression, thought control, abandonment of the rule of law, improper prosecutions amounting to political persecution, rationing, shortages, spying, deprivation, misery, suffering and early death, all of which are the real facts of life socialism brings to humanity. 
 
All of this leaves little room for optimism.  
 
And that doesn't even include all the other foundationally insane positions they take regarding trade, immigration, social issues and foreign policy.   Policies that will haunt the nation for years to come, and let's face it.  Policies that are often in violation of American law, which means America is now being run by criminals who are using the forces of government to impose their destructive criminal activity on America. 
 
I'm about to break out in hives for saying this: There actually is an upside to this, and here are the upsides: 
  • The rest of the world is worse off, and any clabber about China, Russia, the UE and any other economic entity that claims otherwise is lying. 
  • Ultimately, America has the formula for the fix.  That formula will start to take effect on January 3rd, 2023, and continuing on January 20th 2025, with a President who will be unafraid to say and do what needs to be done, without one iota of concern about what the left or the media says.
  • Globalism is now been shown to be a failure, and globalism's failure is America's success.

From my perspective, here's what it comes down to.   If we have a choice between them and us, I'm all for us. The left isn't just wrong, it really is evil.  Be ever vigilant, leftism is a metastasizing cancer that never sleeps, is always mendacious, unendingly insidious and ultimately destroys all it touches and controls.  

That's history, and that history is incontestable. 
 

Sunday, September 6, 2020

When Wish Replaces Thought

by

Don’t you just love Paul Krugman? One of loudest of the many anti-Trump hysterics employed by the New York Times, the former economist has been a reliable source of comedy at least since election night 2016. Once the worst was certain and the world learned that Donald Trump had indeed been elected president of the United States, Krugman pondered the markets, which had plunged overnight. “When might we expect them to recover?” he asked. “A first-pass answer is never . . . So we are very probably looking at a global recession, with no end in sight.”  

What a card! I think we all deserve a Nobel Prize in economics. If Krugman can snag one, why not Stanley down at the bar? He says a lot of stupid things, too.   Krugman never disappoints..........
 
No, here is the indigestible truth for the Democrats. Donald Trump has had the most successful first term of any president in memory, maybe ever. 

His policies brought unemployment down to the lowest rate in decades, Among black and other minority populations, it was the lowest ever—ever. Wages, especially wages at the lower end, were rising, prescription drug prices were falling, and manufacturing was flooding back to the United States, a direct result of Trump’s America First trade policies. He came to office promising to lose two regulations for every new one enacted, but has managed to lose nearly 20 regulations for every new one. His exploitation of America’s energy resources have not only made the country energy independent, they have made us a net exporter of energy. 

Trump has made extraordinary progress on other fronts as well, from his hundreds of judicial appointments to reducing the flow of illegal immigration by 90 percent. On the cultural front, he has defanged the tyranny of Title IX despotism in colleges and universities and, just a day or two ago, he issued an executive order instructing the Office of Management and Budget to “identify and eliminate any trace of ‘critical race theory’ in the federal government.” 

It would be difficult to overstate the significance of this order. Critical race theory is the pseudo-academic version of identity politics, lending a suitable polysyllabic veneer of obfuscation to the brutish Marxoid and America-hating ideologies of Antifa, Black Lives Matter, and kindred sites of festering discontent............To Read More.....



Sunday, August 25, 2019

New Anti-Trump Ploy Is Conjuring A Recession

CONRAD BLACK, Special to the Sun | August 23, 2019

The latest ploy of the anti-Trump press phalanx, and their weekly echo chamber of assorted Democratic candidates and legislators, is to try to move the voter-approval needle by insisting an economic recession is about to occur. The problem is, it isn't.
As weeks pass without a recession or even increasing objective statistical hints of a recession, the continued trumpeting of a recession becomes self-stifling. Not even the economically illiterate mouthpieces of CNN and MSNBC can keep a straight face for long predicting recession when there are no signs it is happening.............Continue Reading

Friday, October 28, 2016

Will China Trigger the Next Global Recession?



China’s debt growth rate has become the focus of some discussions and, fair enough, from comparing the outright levels, it may seem that China can collapse at any moment. Daniel Fernandez suggested this in his article "Has China Reached Its Debt Limit?" in Mises Wire. In response to the government’s monetary expansion stimulus plan after the 2008 financial crisis, China’s corporate sector did indeed leverage up quickly, followed by an equally fast pace of leveraging in the household sector. However, in order to avoid comparing apples with oranges, we need to take a closer look by putting these numbers into perspective. Using the same data source as used by Fernandez, we find that China’s total debt as a percentage of GDP was 254 percent by the end of 2015. Debt-to-GDP ratio of corporate, government, and household sectors stood at 170 percent, 44 percent, and 40 percent respectively.

For government and household sectors, both started from considerably low levels until the last administration kicked in a four-trillion yuan (RMB) stimulus plan in 2009. Government debt-to-GDP ratio, which was kept in the mid 30s in the first decade of this millennium, now stood at 44 percent by the end of 2015. Household’s debt-to-GDP ratio was at 11 percent in 2006 and almost doubled to 19 percent in 2007 and then doubled again to 40 percent by the end of 2015. The leveraging up of households happened exactly as the Chinese society was undergoing rapid urbanization as well as when the government launched its 2009 stimulus.......To Read More...