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Inflation
Great Resignation
1/21
Why do we have inflation?
Why is it persistent?
And why the Fed has no choice but to address this problem?
And if it means hiking and hiking risking lower asset prices and/or a recession, so be it. Not dealing with inflation would be worse
A thread to explain.
Why do we have inflation?
Why is it persistent?
And why the Fed has no choice but to address this problem?
And if it means hiking and hiking risking lower asset prices and/or a recession, so be it. Not dealing with inflation would be worse
A thread to explain.
2/21
The pandemic was arguably the most important economic event of our lifetime.
It sped up the trend of remote work/work-from-home by at least a decade.
The result is what is now known as the “Great Resignation.”
The pandemic was arguably the most important economic event of our lifetime.
It sped up the trend of remote work/work-from-home by at least a decade.
The result is what is now known as the “Great Resignation.”
6/21
So much of economy is structured around 150M+ ppl commuting to a place of work 8 hours a day, 5 days a week.
The pandemic forced a profound change.
Consequently, our consumption basket, the things we buy and consume, has changed to reflect more time away from the office.
So much of economy is structured around 150M+ ppl commuting to a place of work 8 hours a day, 5 days a week.
The pandemic forced a profound change.
Consequently, our consumption basket, the things we buy and consume, has changed to reflect more time away from the office.
7/21
For instance, our consumption of durable goods (things that are expected to last at least three years) has exploded higher. And despite constant calls that this trend will peak with the end of the pandemic, it is not happening, nor do we expect it to happen.
For instance, our consumption of durable goods (things that are expected to last at least three years) has exploded higher. And despite constant calls that this trend will peak with the end of the pandemic, it is not happening, nor do we expect it to happen.
9/21
But instead of recognizing this change and capitalizing on this new consumption basket, corporate America is being counseled by Wall Street to do nothing and just wait for the return of 2019 work patterns and consumption habits.
bloomberg.com
But instead of recognizing this change and capitalizing on this new consumption basket, corporate America is being counseled by Wall Street to do nothing and just wait for the return of 2019 work patterns and consumption habits.
bloomberg.com
10/21
“When we look back in 5 or 10 years, I don’t think this is an event that is fundamentally going to change the way that we as social creatures live and operate,” [Goldman Sachs CEO David] Solomon said.
—-
Wall Street is banking on this, but id it actually going to happen?
“When we look back in 5 or 10 years, I don’t think this is an event that is fundamentally going to change the way that we as social creatures live and operate,” [Goldman Sachs CEO David] Solomon said.
—-
Wall Street is banking on this, but id it actually going to happen?
11/21
Until we understand this change and start restructuring for a new reality, friction of an “out of balance” economy will keep inflation “persistently elevated.
Until we understand this change and start restructuring for a new reality, friction of an “out of balance” economy will keep inflation “persistently elevated.
12/21
So far it has been two years and we are still arguing if changes consumption happening rather than plotting changes production to meet different demands.
Once started, this process will take years to adjust. Then persistent inflation can subside.
So far it has been two years and we are still arguing if changes consumption happening rather than plotting changes production to meet different demands.
Once started, this process will take years to adjust. Then persistent inflation can subside.
13/21
How Does Monetary Policy Fix This?
Many say the Fed cannot print more oil or print more container ships. This is a reference to the supply shortages that are beyond the control of monetary policy.
How Does Monetary Policy Fix This?
Many say the Fed cannot print more oil or print more container ships. This is a reference to the supply shortages that are beyond the control of monetary policy.
14/21
This argument is not new. It was essentially the same argument made by Fed chair Arthur Burns in the 1970s. Back then the supply constraint was an Arab oil embargo contributing to inflation.
This argument is not new. It was essentially the same argument made by Fed chair Arthur Burns in the 1970s. Back then the supply constraint was an Arab oil embargo contributing to inflation.
15/21
Burns was so convinced this was outside the control of monetary policy that he led the Fed’s effort to create the core inflation measures, or inflation less food and energy.
This was to prove inflation was under control, by excluding the items constrained by supply.
Burns was so convinced this was outside the control of monetary policy that he led the Fed’s effort to create the core inflation measures, or inflation less food and energy.
This was to prove inflation was under control, by excluding the items constrained by supply.
16/21
Today we are doing the same thing, by excluding “reopening components” from inflation, such as airline tickets and used cars.
History is repeating, with he same consequences, persistent inflation that Wall Street refuses to believe.
Today we are doing the same thing, by excluding “reopening components” from inflation, such as airline tickets and used cars.
History is repeating, with he same consequences, persistent inflation that Wall Street refuses to believe.
17/21
Former Morgan chief economist Stephen S. Roach worked at the Fed during this period and detailed Burns’s arguments, which sounded eerily similar to arguments promoted today.
project-syndicate.org
Former Morgan chief economist Stephen S. Roach worked at the Fed during this period and detailed Burns’s arguments, which sounded eerily similar to arguments promoted today.
project-syndicate.org
20/21
Simply put, the Fed stimulated its economy far more than any other developed country. This contributed to the U.S. having the highest inflation rate in the developed world.
Simply put, the Fed stimulated its economy far more than any other developed country. This contributed to the U.S. having the highest inflation rate in the developed world.
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