Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Posted: 02 Sep 2013 08:10 PM PDT Preposterous economic proposals from economists living in academic wonderland are the norm. For example: Please consider the following statements by Brad DeLong, a professor of economics at the University of California at Berkeley, from his post Central Banking: Banking Camp vs. Macroeconomics Camp. A prolonged and sustained central-bank policy of purchasing ever-increasing quantities of long-term assets is essential to get a financial sector with diminished appetite for risk to use some of its risk-bearing capacity for its proper purpose of reducing the risk burden on entrepreneurship and enterprise. But such a policy removes diminishes financiers' ability to rely on the easy business of riding the duration yield curve for profits. A simple and straightforward central-bank statement that in the aftermath of 2008-2013 it is clear that inflation targets in the 0-2%/year range run unwarranted downside employment risks, and that inflation targets should instead be in the 2-4%/year range is an obvious no-brainer from the standpoint of an organization that exists to balance aggregate demand to potential aggregate supply.In Academic Wonderland Those in academic-wonderland think inflation is the cure for everything. Somehow they know (or believe central banks should know)...
In the Real World
No Brainer or No Brains? DeLong states "... it is clear that inflation targets in the 0-2%/year range run unwarranted downside employment risks, and that inflation targets should instead be in the 2-4%/year range is an obvious no-brainer..."
I could provide a thousand more examples but won't. Delong-in-Fantasyland DeLong humorously bills his blog as "Grasping Reality with Every Possible Tentacle: Brad DeLong's Semi-Daily Journal--Fair, Balanced, and Reality-Based 99.4% of the Time". Let's return to the real world. When Nixon closed the gold window, the expansion of credit exploded. The Fed blew asset bubble after asset bubble. Fed policies not only got the US economy in serious trouble twice, those policies continue to play a huge part in the wage discrepancies that inflationists like DeLong moan about. In the real world, Japan got in trouble to the tune of 250% of GDP with ridiculous Keynesian and monetarist "solutions" that did not work. In the real world, Japan is in deep trouble financing interest on its national debt, even at rates close to 0%. Delong-in-Wonderland says the cure for such problems is more of the same polices that got us in trouble in the first place. DeLong may as well stand in front of the ocean and command the tides to stop. Such is the thinking (or lack thereof) of those in ivory towers who think mind-over-matter and Alice-in-Wonderland policies work. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 02 Sep 2013 08:50 AM PDT A weak manufacturing recovery of sorts is underway in Europe. How long it lasts remains in question, with France not participating in the recovery. The Markit Eurozone Manufacturing PMI® shows Final Eurozone Manufacturing PMI at 26-month high of 51.4 in August (July: 50.3). India Manufacturing PMI Contracts for First Time Since March 2009 The HSBC India Manufacturing PMI™ shows Manufacturing operating conditions deteriorate for first time in over four years. Clearly this is not good for the Rupee. Nor is the outlook promising for India's preposterous growth target of 6 percent. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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