Rolling US Economy Into The Shitbin Thread

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when i had an office job i was in the office 40 hours a week but only really working for 20-30 tops

flopson, Wednesday, 13 October 2021 05:03 (two years ago) link

I canโ€™t speak to most industries but itโ€™s really hard to find a paralegal right now and the ones that interview certainly seem to believe they have leverage and options.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 13 October 2021 12:05 (two years ago) link

Doing tax prep, I see what my clients made last year on Unemployment, and I was a bit envious tbh

sarahell, Wednesday, 13 October 2021 13:48 (two years ago) link

I have to assume the paralegal thing is partly women with kids dropping out of the workforce due to childcare impossibilities (also couldn't find an after school babysitter btw, even offering what everyone told us was "above market"). In past interview cycles, 80-90% of our candidates have been women who either outright mentioned kids or were in the age range of someone who might have kids.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 13 October 2021 14:25 (two years ago) link

god is dead pic.twitter.com/JuBFlGk9Iz

— ๐’ฅ๐‘œ๐‘’๐“, ๐’ถ ๐’ป๐“‡๐’พ๐‘’๐“ƒ๐’น (@joeljohnson) October 24, 2021

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Sunday, 24 October 2021 21:33 (two years ago) link

wow. and i thought it was bad when the chicken fingers shortage happened!

Nhex, Sunday, 24 October 2021 22:23 (two years ago) link

At a casino buffet that could lead to riots.

papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 24 October 2021 23:43 (two years ago) link

Monthly job growth has averaged 561,000 jobs a month in 2021. It's 612,000 a month since March. The average for June-July was 1.026 million jobs a month.

Big upside revisions, never really covered, are part of why you aren't aware of this, but also because it's off narrative. https://t.co/4xjUZGVW8w

— Mike Konczal (@rortybomb) October 26, 2021

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Tuesday, 26 October 2021 14:40 (two years ago) link

Interesting. I probably understand less about economics than I do about epidemiology, but it does seem like the economy doing relatively well, or at least recovering pretty quickly, is what's causing at least as much of the bad stuff as good. The Great Resignation is real, but some people are taking advantage of it to get better or better paying jobs, and bigger paychecks leads to inflation. At the same time, people are spending more, too, which post ("post") pandemic is putting strains on supply and production, which is also causing prices to go up.

I find the elusive PS5 a pretty fascinating example. We get a next generation video game console launched in the middle of a pandemic, at a time of historic instability, at a pretty high price point, in the midst of a chip shortage, etc.. And yet, it continues to sell and sell out, and in fact is selling more than other consoles, iirc. So it's an illustrative conflation of lots of different economic concerns, supply and demand, discretionary spending, consumerism, supply chain issues, and all sorts of stuff that emphasizes the complexity of a global market that might be doing better than it seems.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 26 October 2021 15:23 (two years ago) link

Iโ€™m a paralegal. If youโ€™re hiring in the LA area I will gladly accept a mountain of money in exchange for my labor.

Legal market been white hot recently. If I donโ€™t get a bonus or a raise this new year Iโ€™m going to be looking around. Mostly because I had to buy a new car recently and I could use the money. =|

officer sonny bonds, lytton pd (mayor jingleberries), Tuesday, 26 October 2021 18:45 (two years ago) link

https://slate.com/human-interest/2021/10/job-seeking-advice-hiring-trend-tight-economy.html

My heart weeps for the hiring managers being ghosted left and right by prospective employees. It's all very
https://i.imgur.com/Rpq3yhp.jpeg

(a picture of a defecating pig) (Old Lunch), Thursday, 28 October 2021 16:45 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

Iโ€™ve watched this 10 times and it somehow gets better each time. #fintok #stocktok pic.twitter.com/yQ0Ps0ujzF

— TikTok Investors (@TikTokInvestors) August 31, 2020

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Monday, 29 November 2021 22:17 (two years ago) link

Those dudes are the best, I forgot all about their bits.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 29 November 2021 23:05 (two years ago) link

Hmm:

We took a look at the most recent earnings statements and earnings calls of the big meat processing companies, and here's what we found: they are raising prices far more than any cost increases they're facing, resulting in skyrocketing profit margins.https://t.co/NVboVeAvWT

— Bharat Ramamurti (@BharatRamamurti) December 10, 2021

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 11 December 2021 23:41 (two years ago) link

The media's panic stories about inflation have given every corporation a green light to raise prices as fast as possible.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 11 December 2021 23:43 (two years ago) link

tin foil hat time but I feel like thereโ€™s probably a riff on a capital strike afoot. I got this sense when Obama was elected and Wall Street ghouls would parade through cable news whining about โ€œuncertaintyโ€ well after their balls had been powdered by public funds and constant reassurance (rhetorically and policy-wise) from the admin

caddy lac brougham? (will), Saturday, 11 December 2021 23:51 (two years ago) link

iirc this spiel went on for years after the crash where they were made beyond Whole

caddy lac brougham? (will), Saturday, 11 December 2021 23:54 (two years ago) link

โ€œFascism should rightly be called corporatism, as it is the merger of corporate and government power.โ€

earlnash, Sunday, 12 December 2021 02:13 (two years ago) link

three weeks pass...

this guy has the right idea on inflation imo

https://www.tiktok.com/@meals_by_cug/video/7040146842071518511?

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Friday, 7 January 2022 23:24 (two years ago) link

that guy otmfm

Nedlene Grendel as Basenji Holmo (map), Saturday, 8 January 2022 00:10 (two years ago) link

cug is a lot of fun

i cannot help if you made yourself not funny (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 8 January 2022 06:32 (two years ago) link

๐Ÿง pic.twitter.com/XcZsNkiZxP

— Aaron Fritschner (@Fritschner) January 7, 2022

rob, Saturday, 8 January 2022 15:20 (two years ago) link

Maybe not the right thread for that really. Do we have a thread about the ontology of "the economy"?

rob, Saturday, 8 January 2022 15:22 (two years ago) link

"rolling us economy is a shitbin thread"

class project pat (m bison), Saturday, 8 January 2022 16:09 (two years ago) link

i've been reading Kate Soper's "Post Growth Living" and have been thinking about this kind of thing a lot.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 8 January 2022 20:58 (two years ago) link

Feels like weโ€™re rolling into the shitbin again!

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Friday, 14 January 2022 14:21 (two years ago) link

that's just the way it is
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Adw772km7PQ

i cannot help if you made yourself not funny (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 15 January 2022 07:02 (two years ago) link

Stonks

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Monday, 24 January 2022 17:35 (two years ago) link

lol

class project pat (m bison), Monday, 24 January 2022 17:39 (two years ago) link

https://www.businessinsider.com/federal-reserve-inflaton-everything-bubble-economy-stock-market-debt-2022-1

The scary contours of what's coming was summed up well by a former Federal Reserve official Thomas Hoenig, who voted against the Fed's easy money policies before retiring in 2011. Back in 2016, Hoenig was warning about the very large and long-term risks that the Fed was piling up through zero-percent rates and quantitative easing.

"You had seven years of basically zero-interest rates. Now, what happens in an economic system over seven years? The entire market system develops a new equilibrium โ€” around a zero rate," Hoenig told me in 2016. "An entire economic system around a zero rate. Not only in the US, but globally. It's massive. Now, think of the adjustment process to a new equilibrium at a higher rate. Do you think it's costless? Do you think that no one will suffer? Do you think there won't be winners and losers? No way."

class project pat (m bison), Monday, 24 January 2022 18:05 (two years ago) link

Thomas Hoenig of the Mercatus Center. Koch funded, "engaged in campaigns involving deregulation, especially environmental deregulation. According to The Guardian in 2010, it "now fills the role once played by the economics department at Chicago University as the originator of extreme neoliberal ideas.""

bulb after bulb, Monday, 24 January 2022 18:13 (two years ago) link

im not co-signing his life work to be clear! its just grist for the shitbin mill

class project pat (m bison), Monday, 24 January 2022 18:20 (two years ago) link

Chicago University

Ahem, University of Chicago.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 January 2022 18:28 (two years ago) link

either way its a fuckin hive of scum and villainy

adam, Monday, 24 January 2022 19:39 (two years ago) link

THE Chicago Stonk University

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 24 January 2022 19:42 (two years ago) link

He sounds OTM on this one tbh though.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 24 January 2022 20:10 (two years ago) link

Itโ€™s not a loss until you sell pic.twitter.com/gvmOegtssl

— Dr. Parik Patel, BA, CFA, ACCA Esq. ๐Ÿ’ธ (@ParikPatelCFA) January 24, 2022

๐” ๐”ž๐”ข๐”จ (caek), Monday, 24 January 2022 20:18 (two years ago) link

He sounds OTM on this one tbh though.

stopped calendar etc.

bulb after bulb, Monday, 24 January 2022 21:05 (two years ago) link

I know MMT has made loose monetary policy into a lefty thing, but I still believe it does way more to enrich the rich and widen the gap and it's always only at the tail end of these things that you start to see wages rise and benefits reach the bottom. Fiscal stimulus is the way to go, not monetary.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 24 January 2022 21:19 (two years ago) link

Fiscal stimulus is the way to go, not monetary.

otm. also tax policy needs to become more aggressively re-distributive.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 24 January 2022 21:51 (two years ago) link

Hoenig would not support fiscal stimulus. While on the Fed in 2008 his big worry was inflation. He has been a profit of doom for decades. That does not, in itself, make him "OTM on this one."

bulb after bulb, Monday, 24 January 2022 21:55 (two years ago) link

Now, think of the adjustment process to a new equilibrium at a higher rate. Do you think it's costless? Do you think that no one will suffer? Do you think there won't be winners and losers? No way.

As an argument against rate changes this is pure stupidity. It would apply to any change in monetary policy, because markets always produce winners and losers.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 24 January 2022 22:05 (two years ago) link

Not a good sign that the other two days comparable to today were in October 2008:

If you want to know how rare today's turnaround was off that sell off. https://t.co/hrqLWmvI4S

— Tracey Ryniec (@TraceyRyniec) January 24, 2022

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Monday, 24 January 2022 22:17 (two years ago) link

tapered
pants

Yerac, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 04:45 (two years ago) link

https://www.businessinsider.com/federal-reserve-inflaton-everything-bubble-economy-stock-market-debt-2022-1

The scary contours of what's coming was summed up well by a former Federal Reserve official Thomas Hoenig, who voted against the Fed's easy money policies before retiring in 2011. Back in 2016, Hoenig was warning about the very large and long-term risks that the Fed was piling up through zero-percent rates and quantitative easing.
"You had seven years of basically zero-interest rates. Now, what happens in an economic system over seven years? The entire market system develops a new equilibrium โ€” around a zero rate," Hoenig told me in 2016. "An entire economic system around a zero rate. Not only in the US, but globally. It's massive. Now, think of the adjustment process to a new equilibrium at a higher rate. Do you think it's costless? Do you think that no one will suffer? Do you think there won't be winners and losers? No way."

โ€• class project pat (m bison), Monday, January 24, 2022 1:05 PM (nine hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

this is backwards. the fed didn't set a zero rate and then an equilibrium developed around that. the equilibrium rate is near-zero (due to a confluence of factors outside of the fed's control that have lead to a secular decline in interest rates worldwide since the 90s) and the fed set its policy rate in accordance with that to achieve its mandate of stable inflation and low unemployment

high interest rates or low interest rates are not themselves inherently desirable. interest rates are low because the supply of private-sector savings are large relative to the private-sector demand for investment. if the fed keeps rates low, the federal government can take advantage of low rates and do public-sector investments on the cheap to increase overall demand for investment. having the fed raise rates raise the cost of public investment, and would also make the gap between private savings + investment wider

the reasons why savings dwarf investment are a mix of things like demographics (life expectancy increasing, families have fewer children mean older populations, old people saving more for longer retirements), slowing productivity growth (fewer productive investments to be made), increases in wealth inequality (rich people save more). none of these are controlled by central banks.

since inflation remained low and unemployment remained high, central banks have mostly kept interest rates low for the last decade

a notable exception was when the fed started raising rates in 2015 to preemptively stop inflation because it thought it was near full employment. it choked off the labor market recovery and arguably got trump elected. inflation remained below target anyway and the unemployment rate fell to lowest levels ever under trump on the even of the pandemic.

this was a huge unforced error as it was obvious to anyone who looked at broader labour market indicators like prime-age employment to population ratios that the labour market had a lot more slack than indicated by the unemployment rate

the fed will almost surely raise interest rates now because inflation is high, but it (hopefully) won't have to raise them very high or very fast in order to choke off inflation, or else it would threaten the labour market recovery. the structural factors leading to long-term low interest rates are not reversing (the demographic shift is accelerating, productivity remains low, and wealth inequality keeps getting higher), so it's unlikely that we're moving to a new long term period of lower saving/higher investment

I know MMT has made loose monetary policy into a lefty thing, but I still believe it does way more to enrich the rich and widen the gap and it's always only at the tail end of these things that you start to see wages rise and benefits reach the bottom. Fiscal stimulus is the way to go, not monetary.

โ€• longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, January 24, 2022 4:19 PM (six hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

MMT didn't make loose monetary policy a lefty thing. the argument that loose monetary policy was better than loose fiscal policy for countercyclical policy was the consensus among neoliberal economists pre-2008. MMT made loose fiscal policy a lefty thing (Stephanie Kelton's book is called The Deficit Myth) but loose fiscal policy was already a lefty thing, so the most you can say is that they made it a little bit more of a lefty thing (by creating a new horde of online econ quack)

MMT advocates for the de-separation of monetary and fiscal policy, in order to let fiscal policy roam free. rather than have the federal reserve set monetary policy independently of the treasury, MMT argue that congress/treasury should exert "fiscal dominance" and demand that the fed accommodate whatever spending it wants to do. the idea is then that the federal government can spend until it hits "real resource constraints", at which point it can raise taxes to cut inflation. this means that if (for example) republicans control congress (and/or the presidency) during a period of high inflation, they would need to vote to raise taxes to rein in inflation. this would obviously not happen, and that's why severing fed-treasury independence is considered a recipe for runaway inflation

fwiw, none of what i said above is MMT. deficit spending during periods when private savings push equilibrium interest rates near (or below) zero is good because (i) public investments are good, (ii) buying even more of them when they can be had for cheap, and (iii) fiscal policy can help the economy achieve full employment beyond what monetary policy can achieve when interest rates are at the zero lower bound. all of this is consistent with monetary independence

using monetary policy to solve wealth inequality is a bad idea. not only are there better ways to reduce wealth inequality (taxing wealth, confiscating inheritances, creating sovereign wealth funds and issuing citizens dividends, nationalizing industries), but higher interest rates would not solve wealth inequality. the mechanism through which higher interest rates affect things like inflation and asset prices is through lower nominal income growth and investment and higher unemployment. since most people get nearly all their income from labour earnings, this would (and historically always has) affected workers more than the rich. it's relatively painless for the rich to undergo income volatility from transitions to higher interest rates--their income is high, so even if it goes up and down, it's still high even when it's way down--and they can change their portfolios (for example by moving towards low duration stocks that aren't affected by the fed rate). whereas it's very hard for normal people to adjust to any shock to labor income, especially loss of a job

there's a great empirical example of this. wealth inequality went on a tear in the decade after the volcker shock:

https://www.cbpp.org/sites/default/files/styles/report_580_high_dpi/public/atoms/files/1-13-20pov-f6.png?itok=DUEJDHYp

flopson, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 05:18 (two years ago) link

oh look it's Reagan's face again

bad milk blood robot (sleeve), Tuesday, 25 January 2022 06:20 (two years ago) link

xp: ok yeah that sounds right. I guess it's more just that I have lefty friends now who think low rates forever is a great idea and in my mind that is tied to the popularity of MMT but maybe that's not the origin of it or maybe they are bastardizing MMT.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 25 January 2022 14:15 (two years ago) link

TBC, not suggesting higher rates would help solve income inequality, just suggesting that low rates may have contributed to it because those who already have wealth are in the best position to take advantage of the wealth generation opportunities created by low rates, whereas there doesn't seem to be evidence of low rates creating jobs and raising wages and that sort of thing.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 25 January 2022 14:18 (two years ago) link

itโ€™s hard to get direct evidence, because by design the fed cuts rates when things are going badly and raises rates during booms. this econometric challenge is known as Milton Friedmanโ€™s thermostat. the idea is the thermostat turns on when itโ€™s cold and off when itโ€™s warm in order to keep the temperature inside constant, so a simple correlation between thermostat and temperature would be weak. but you can suss out the effects when you study sudden changes like the volcker shock or monetary policy mistakes like the great depression (where they did the opposite and raised rates during a recession). economists also try to tease out more marginal surprises from fed statements etc. https://eml.berkeley.edu/~dromer/papers/AER_September04.pdf

flopson, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 14:57 (two years ago) link

I realize this is very squishy and observational, but it seemed to me like in both of the last crises (2008 and COVID), the enormous amount of monetary stimulus immediately had a strong upward effect on asset prices, but took much longer to have an impact on things that help ordinary people (and had a much smaller impact).

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 25 January 2022 16:48 (two years ago) link


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