Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Dr. Mr. Speaker
- Trend of Unemployment Claims as % of Continuing Unemployment; US Population vs. Employment, vs. Labor Force, vs. Continued Unemployed
- Lies, Half-Truths, and 100% Hubris on 60 Minutes; Deficit-Chicken Republicans; Middle-Class Crucifixion; Ron Paul Needs Your Support
Posted: 07 Dec 2010 01:04 PM PST Here are the Emails I sent to House Speaker John Boehner. The first is in regards to Ron Paul and the chairmanship of the Monetary Policy subcommittee. Dear Mr. SpeakerBudget Deficit Email My second Email to House Speaker John Boehner is regarding the budget deficit. Dear Mr. SpeakerPlease email House Speaker Boehner Regarding Ron Paul to let him know how you feel. That link will put in a subject line of Ron Paul for Monetary Policy Chairmanship. Please email House Speaker Boehner Regarding the Budget. The second link will put in a subject line of $900 Billion Budget Compromise. Just click on the links and type away to your heart's content. If your browser does not interface with email, then simply email Boehner at AsktheLeader@mail.house.gov Send an Email a day until the chairmanship is decided and this Budget Compromise is scrapped. Phone: (202) 225-4000 Fax: (202) 225-5117 Please phone, Fax, and email today. Please forward to anyone willing to email Boehner. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 07 Dec 2010 10:18 AM PST Inquiring minds might be interested in a pair of charts courtesy of reader Tim Wallace. Click on either chart to see a sharper image. Note the trendline of new unemployment claims as a percentage of continuing unemployment. Over time, the chart suggests it takes longer and longer to find a job. There was a brief respite in the Clinton years, no doubt because of the internet boom, not because Clinton did anything particularly special. The trend is unbroken all the way back to 1967. It just was not noticeable before because overall unemployment was lower. US Population vs. Employment, vs. Labor Force, vs. Continued Unemployed The recent spike in continued unemployed is especially aggravating given the flat growth in employment. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 07 Dec 2010 03:56 AM PST I am very disheartened but not at all surprised (given that I predicted it), the complete fiscal irresponsibility of the "compromise" tax proposal by president Obama that Democratic sheep will no doubt approve right along with Obama's proposal will cost a whopping $900 billion over two years. For details please see Cookies for Susie and Obama's "Temporary" Tax Compromise Bernanke let us all know this was coming in Sunday's Creampuff Interview on 60 Minutes Pelley: Do you anticipate a scenario in which you would commit to more than $600 billion? Bernanke: Oh, it's certainly possible. And again, it depends on the efficacy of the program. It depends on inflation. And finally it depends on how the economy looks. Pelley: Some people think the $600 billion is a terrible idea. Bernanke: Well, this fear of inflation, I think is way overstated. I happen to agree with Bernanke's last statement (at least on the basis of $600 billion in QE alone). However, it's important to point out that I view inflation as an expansion of credit and I do not see that $600 billion in QE will spur lending. Nonetheless, the Fed's QE policy is very misguided because it is likely to spur continued speculation in commodities. Think of it this way: China, Japan, or US investors do not have to finance $600 billion of US deficit spending, the Treasury simply printed enough money out of thin air to cover it. That money will find another home, but I highly doubt it is the home Bernanke wants. There is little reason for businesses to hire workers in this environments and the odds of re-blowing the housing bubble are close to zero. There are still other problems that adversely affect those on fixed income. This is a very dangerous game Bernanke is playing. I talked about it yesterday in Multiple Simultaneous Games of "Chicken"; Price Controls on Walmart; China Declares Shift to "Prudent" Monetary Policy Internationally, there are multiple simultaneous games of chicken.Outright Lies Bernanke continued with statements best described a bald-faced lies. "One myth that's out there is that what we're doing is printing money. We're not printing money. The amount of currency in circulation is not changing. The money supply is not changing in any significant way. What we're doing is lowing interest rates by buying Treasury securities. And by lowering interest rates, we hope to stimulate the economy to grow faster. So, the trick is to find the appropriate moment when to begin to unwind this policy. And that's what we're gonna do." Bernanke is printing money. He is monetizing the national debt. He tried to hide it by saying "currency in circulation is not changing". That is not the definition of money the Fed uses at all. The Fed typically uses M2. M2 1980-Present It appears to me that money is changing in a significant way. Bear in mind there are better representations of money than M2, at least I think so, but M2 is what the Fed watches. Bernanke stated he is lowering interest rates. What he should have said is that he hopes QE will lower rates. The irony in this is he wants inflation to rise. First in Flight The above courtesy of Scott Simonton at BlackHawk Capital Management. Bernanke wants it both ways: higher inflation and lower treasury yields. Meanwhile his goal is to get China to hike interest rates hoping to get the dollar to drop. China is resisting and the global pressures build. This is the market's response tonight in metals and in treasuries. Metals Treasuries Yield Curve courtesy of Bloomberg. Bear in mind one day does not a trend make. However, the trend towards higher yields started the day after the election when QE formally went into effect. The yield on 5-year treasuries is up over 55 basis points (1/2%) since then. Gold had been rising long before that. Expect More QE To keep treasury yields low in the face of the $900 billion deficit-chicken "compromise" of Obama, Bernanke will need to monetize another $37.5 billion in treasuries a month, hoping this spurs inflation, spending, and hiring. 100 Percent Hubris What if this does not spur hiring but instead spurs gasoline prices and food prices? Oh not to worry .... Pelley: You have what degree of confidence in your ability to control this? Bernanke: One hundred percent. Bernanke is a man with 100% confidence who did not see the housing bubble, who did not see a recession, whose worst case scenario for unemployment was 8.5% when it was already over 8%. Bernanke cannot find his ass with both hands and a roadmap, yet he is one hundred percent certain about his ability to control things. After everything blows sky high we just may hear a statement like this. Creampuff Non-Questions That was not really an "interview" on 60 minutes, it was an infomercial for Bernanke. Many Fed governors disagree with Bernanke. Where was the other side of the story? The most disgusting part for me was pathetic exchange. Pelley: Falling prices lead to falling wages. It lets the steam out of the economy. And you start spiraling downward. Bernanke: Exactly. Exactly. That's deflation and that's what happened in the Great Depression. Spare me the sap. What caused the great depression was the runup in credit that preceded it. The idea that you can throw the biggest party the world has ever seen and not pay a price for it is preposterous. Fixed Income and Middle-Class Crucifixion The idea that rising prices is a good thing when there are 15 million unemployed is moronic. Moreover, if Bernanke does manage to hold down interest rates while getting his wish for higher prices, those on fixed incomes will be crucified. Inflation is a tax on the poor and middle class, benefiting those with first access to money: banks and the wealthy. Ron Paul Under Attack Ron Paul is under attack as discussed in Monetary Policy: Fed Critic Ron Paul's Power Play Retiring New Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg, one of the Federal Reserve's most stalwart Republican supporters, showed up for a meeting at the central bank in November bearing a surprising gift: a box of End the Fed books. As he handed out the 2009 best seller by Representative Ron Paul, a longtime Fed critic, Gregg told the gathering it would be worth reading to see what the other side is plotting.Time's a Wastin' Boehner will decide some of those chair subcommittees as early as Dec. 8. There is no time to waste. Please phone, Fax, AND email Boehner today. Demand Ron Paul be given chairmanship of the monetary policy subcommittee. Please email House Speaker Boehner to let him know how you feel. Just click on the link. If your browser does not interface with email, then email Boehner at AsktheLeader@mail.house.gov Sens an Email a day until the chairmanship is decided. Phone: (202) 225-4000 Fax: (202) 225-5117 Please phone, Fax, and email today. Please forward to anyone willing to email Boehner. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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