Simple enough question. To the people who have been predicting it for years now, has the failure of your predictions caused you to re-evaluate your viewpoints?
10/21/2011 12:14:26 AM
IBTL
10/21/2011 12:45:28 AM
It has. I clearly failed to factor in the Obama induced Great Recession into my inflation calculation. You see, had the recession ended then inflation would have been the result. But, by dragging the recession on for years, Obama has kept inflation somewhat in check.
10/21/2011 12:56:37 AM
McDanger, you're proving with this thread that you haven't even bothered to understand (what you think are) your ideological opponents. That in itself is kind of funny, given that half of your posts are something along of the lines of, "C'mon on guys, just get educated, information is free and easy to come by!" Hyperinflation is not very high inflation. Hyperinflation is "flight inflation"; something would trigger a loss of faith in the currency, leading to a sell off and pressure to either create more money or drop the currency altogether.Hyperinflation is not an inevitability, it's just one of a few possible outcomes. Hyperinflation would certainly be preceded by a collapse in the bond market and the pyramiding of high yield bonds that, once matured, can only be paid for with higher yielding bonds. The government here will have a choice, just like governments in Europe have a choice. Of course, in Europe, they're somewhat restrained by the rules of the ECB and member states that have no interest in "bailing out" their counterparts. In the United States, we have a Fed chairman that I think has literally gone insane and will stop at nothing.Anyone that says hyperinflation has to happen, or that they know when it will happen, is bullshitting. Since economics is ultimately just human behavior, it's hard to know how and when things will play out. The only thing that is guaranteed is that the U.S. government will not be able to keep up current levels of spending, regardless of any tax hikes that might occur.
10/21/2011 10:13:59 AM
10/21/2011 10:58:16 AM
10/21/2011 11:38:46 AM
10/21/2011 12:35:37 PM
You seem pretty anti-authoritarian. Is there any reason in particular that you trust the numbers coming from the same government that has every reason to cover up the disastrous effects of its policies?I think the price increases in those areas have different explanations. Tuition increases are undoubtedly a result of credit being too available, and of course, credit originates from the banks. Loans are being given to students that would not be able to get them without the cheap money. If market discipline was allowed to work, there's really no way that a bank would risk issuing hundreds of thousands of dollars on a student going to a fourth tier law school. The student loan bubble is, perhaps, the best example of how private banks can drive up prices.Food and energy may be partially money-related and partially supply related. I think the argument could be made that the "Arab Spring" was set off in part by huge increases in the price of food, and since it's now verified that a lot of the Fed's money is being sent out of the country, this seems like an important factor.Health care costs are going up, but I think the explanations are primarily structural; the third party system doesn't work, as it shields consumers from the true cost of health care through group plans or government coverage.The thing about inflation is that it's impossible to know exactly where the money goes, or what products/services are going to get "bid up". It all depends on who the banks give the money to.[Edited on October 21, 2011 at 12:56 PM. Reason : ]
10/21/2011 12:55:52 PM
10/21/2011 1:02:07 PM
10/21/2011 1:07:53 PM
I guess I take people at face value; I seem to recall you declaring yourself an Austrian school person at some point. It never occurred to me that you'd deviate from them on core pillars of economic thought, so I apologize for treating you with so much frustration and exhaustion. I argue with these folks a lot.
10/21/2011 1:14:26 PM
10/21/2011 2:10:39 PM
Not all Austrians see price inflation ahead. http://libertarianpapers.org/articles/2010/lp-2-43.pdfHowever, it is a major weakness of most of the Austrian school that most simply do not account for debt or the long-run consequences (or even possibility) of deleveraging. I was a Lew Rockwell-like inflation guy, until about 2007 thankfully.
10/21/2011 2:36:56 PM
I got my wheel barrow ready.
10/21/2011 3:06:58 PM
Funny story. the CPI includes an entry for housing, which is falling for reasons I'm sure all of us can understand. As such, the CPI should be under-reporting inflation as we speak.
10/21/2011 5:03:10 PM
Come now, these things take time to get all vertical, I think its way to early to ask where is it considering the size of this global money printing. You know what are the most expensive words in the world are, this time is different. [Edited on October 21, 2011 at 8:05 PM. Reason : no pic]
10/21/2011 7:58:35 PM
10/22/2011 9:59:09 AM
Here's the most recent image of sectoral balances I could find:
10/22/2011 10:02:14 AM
10/22/2011 2:07:34 PM
10/22/2011 5:45:45 PM
If you can't produce any kind of model for your speculations about how the economy functions then you might as well be reading from goat entrails and calling them market outlooks.
10/24/2011 12:18:42 PM
Oh wait I think the WSJ already does that...
10/24/2011 12:21:41 PM
You bring up a good point...banks/fed reserve/Chicago Economists likely would have just as much success with an entrails model for housing prices as the ones they used.
10/24/2011 5:20:51 PM
10/24/2011 5:43:16 PM
10/24/2011 6:58:30 PM
Chance I am not trying to say the moving around of price levels are intrinsically tied to anything resembling technological progress, or whatever. Clearly there's nothing you can do *purely* in monetary theory (without thinking about recipients and actors in the real economy and the material conditions they act/decide in). My comments thus far have been trying to demonstrate that fundamental disconnection, but also, demonstrate that changing conditions may mandate the expansion of monetary supply. If done properly, people in general can survive the rise in price levels. This is what I was talking about before with respect to accessibility; the crest of progress isn't the only important factor in life, we should care about the social conditions and consequences of our policies too.
10/25/2011 2:04:50 PM
10/25/2011 7:11:43 PM
Honestly I'm more interested in hearing what LS and destroyer have to say, in continuing the thread of discussion above. I honestly think you and I are incapable of really talking about this, I'm not really willing to pick the pieces up at the moment to figure out how to connect right now.
10/25/2011 8:26:42 PM
So being unable to articulate a cogent argument is another hallmark of CM or what?
10/25/2011 9:28:43 PM
Dude we are unable to talk because we'd have to go right back to the foundations of everything. It's clear we're not using words the same, we don't have the same idea of what science, theories, modeling is, etc etc. It's like the definitions/concepts we use are mismatched across the board; haven't you noticed this same issue when you talk to Kris? The discussions always seem to descend into utter confusion with you, and so I want to return back to the somewhat more understandable/cogent part of the thread, which destroyer and lonesnark have bowed out of since you came in to play their Patsy.
10/25/2011 10:44:36 PM
10/25/2011 11:38:13 PM
10/26/2011 7:00:47 AM
10/26/2011 8:50:45 AM
10/26/2011 11:38:16 AM
From Ch 2 of The Cambridge Companion to Keynes:
10/26/2011 12:03:22 PM
10/26/2011 12:34:57 PM
bump
10/27/2011 3:12:29 PM
10/27/2011 4:22:53 PM
10/27/2011 5:36:53 PM
10/27/2011 6:54:50 PM
10/27/2011 7:15:39 PM
10/28/2011 9:43:34 AM
^ Not true. Layoffs engender reductions in consumption and balance sheet repair, which is what is needed during a recession. Recovery cannot resume until consumption patterns are back in line with productivity.
10/28/2011 12:09:17 PM
"In the long run . . ."
10/28/2011 4:20:08 PM
"In the long run, my friend, it's your theory that's dead"
10/28/2011 6:10:10 PM
When you drop a rock into a pond, eventually the waves calm down. That is, unless something else hits the pond. The end.
10/28/2011 10:12:43 PM
http://www.google.com/gwt/x?source=reader&u=http%3A%2F%2Fcafehayek.com%2F2011%2F10%2Fdrunk-with-keynesian-prejudices.htmlhttp://www.google.com/gwt/x?source=reader&u=http%3A%2F%2Fcafehayek.com%2F2011%2F10%2Fquotation-of-the-day-104.html[Edited on October 29, 2011 at 10:53 AM. Reason : I]
10/29/2011 10:51:33 AM
bump. any real conversation left, or?
10/31/2011 9:08:08 AM
10/31/2011 11:29:26 AM
set 'em up
11/9/2011 2:15:56 PM