Thursday, May 24, 2012
Economic Follies of the 1960s Echo in the 2012 Presidential Campaign
The 2012 presidential campaign is gaining momentum. Both sides agree
that the economy will be the central issue. Mitt Romney is promising to
get unemployment down to 6 percent by the end of his first term and
eventually to 4 percent. Barack Obama is hesitant to set a numerical
target, having been burned doing that early in his term, but he makes it
clear he thinks he can do better than the GOP candidate. I hear echoes
of the 1960s, when John Kennedy won the presidency with a promise to
get the country moving again. It may be a good time to take a look back
at that period. Read more>>>
Sunday, May 20, 2012
US Inflation Data: Seasonally Adjusted CPI Shows Zero Change for April
The headline number in the latest inflation report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
the Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers, seasonally adjusted, showed
zero change for April 2012. Unrounded data for the month, restated at an annual
rate, showed inflation of 0.36 percent, down from 3.54 percent in March.
Without seasonal adjustment, the inflation rate for April
was 3.7 percent. Motor fuel prices contributed to the difference between the
rates with and without seasonal adjustment. Motor fuel prices usually rise in
April, but this year, they rose much less than usual. The unadjusted increase
was 1.8 percent, but the seasonally adjusted change was -2.6 percent.
Food and energy prices are volatile and usually account for
much of the month-to-month change in the CPI. We can remove their effect by
taking food and energy out of the CPI. Economists call the result the core
inflation rate. The monthly change in core inflation, stated at an
annual rate, was 2.92 percent in April, about the same as in March.
Another way to remove volatility is the 16% trimmed mean CPI
published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. It removes the 8% of prices
that increase most and the 8% that increase least in each month, whatever they
are. The 16 percent trimmed mean CPI increased at an annual rate of 1.94
percent in April, down about half a point from the March rate.
Economists use adjusted measures of inflation, such as the
seasonally adjusted, core, and 16 percent trimmed mean indexes, because they
are looking for underlying trends that are relevant to the formulation of
economic policy. Changes caused by seasonal factors, and changes like the price
of oil, which are determined in world markets, are not highly relevant to
policy making. Consumers, on the other hand, look at price changes as they
happen in the real world, without seasonal adjustment. Far from ignoring prices
that change more than usual, they may give them exaggerated importance. For
that reason, the rate of inflation as perceived by consumers is often higher
than inflation as measured by economists. For a detailed discussion of the
difference between perceived and measured inflation, see this
earlier post.
To see longer-term trends in inflation, it is useful to look
at year-on-year changes, which compare each month’s price level with that of
the same month in the year before. All year-on-year measures of inflation rates
slowed during the global recession then rose again for most of 2011. All-items
and core inflation have converged to rates of just over 2 percent in 2012. The
Fed considers inflation of about 2 percent to be consistent with its mandate to
maintain price stability.
Follow
this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with charts of
all the latest inflation data.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Inflation is Quiet, So Why are People Still Feeling its Pain?
This week’s report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
shows no change in the seasonally adjusted U.S. consumer price index
for April. Real average hourly earnings were also unchanged. On the face
of it, those numbers should take inflation off the list of things
people have to worry about, but they don’t. Instead, every time I post
numbers that show inflation is low, I get comments like these:
“Inflation is creeping in. Businesses are holding back. People are up against the wall.”
“Those who live in ivory towers and pontificate about the ‘real’ economy while being totally removed from it should really experience how the 99 percent live.”
“If you believe the BS stats, you are in the minority. Consumers KNOW differently. Core CPI, etc. What a pile of cowdung!” >>>Read more
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Costs of the employer health care deduction and other links
- Writing in Forbes, Avik Roy explains how the employer health care deduction drives up health care costs for everyone, in part by increasing the bargaining power of major hospitals and weakening the incentive of insurers to resist that bargaining power. "Fourth-party insurance is worth than third-party insurance," says Roy.
- John Kay of the Financial Times writes that it is time to reform banking regulation to encourage more innovation and competition. What particularly gets him going are regulatory requirements that force anyone who wants to start a new bank to make it just like other banks. Imagine what it would be like, says Kay, if there were a software regulatory agency that had required Bill Gates to work for several years at IBM and finish his Harvard degree before starting his own software firm.
- Simon Johnson sees the $2 billion trading loss at JP Morgan as a sign that banks can't be trusted to manage risks wisely. The disaster at the bank that was supposed to be the best risk manager strengthens the case for stronger regulation of proprietary trading.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
How the Latin Triangle Swallowed the Euro
Back in 1996, Rudiger Dornbusch wrote a paper about the political economy of exchange rates in Latin America. He called it “The Latin Triangle”.
It describes a cycle in which governments become trapped in
inappropriate fixed-exchange rates that inevitably end unhappily. Latin
America has put that particular form of economic instability behind it,
but a new version of the Latin triangle seems to be playing itself out
in Europe today, both in the weaker members of the euro area (the
so-called PIIGS) and in some of the newer member states that chose fixed
rates (the BELLs—Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania). This post
explores the implications of the Latin American experience for Europe
today. >>>Read More
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Looking for the Good News in the April Jobs Report
The April jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics is not a
strong one. Most comments have focused on the bad news, especially the
modest 115,000 increase in payroll jobs. If you look hard, there is some
good news, too, although not as much or as easy to find as we would
like.
Start my looking more closely at the numbers for payroll jobs. The headline number was admittedly paltry. However, there were some welcome upward revisions for earlier months. The March number was revised up by 34,000, to 154,000, and February’s by 19,000, to 259,000. All in all, the April report revealed 168,000 new jobs that we didn’t previously know about. That sounds at least a little better. Read more>>>
Follow this link to view or download a brief classroom-ready slideshow with charts of the latest employment numbers.
Start my looking more closely at the numbers for payroll jobs. The headline number was admittedly paltry. However, there were some welcome upward revisions for earlier months. The March number was revised up by 34,000, to 154,000, and February’s by 19,000, to 259,000. All in all, the April report revealed 168,000 new jobs that we didn’t previously know about. That sounds at least a little better. Read more>>>
Follow this link to view or download a brief classroom-ready slideshow with charts of the latest employment numbers.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Fracking and the Environment: An Economic Perspective
When people look at “fracking”—the production of natural gas through
hydraulic fracturing techniques--they see different things. Critics see
polluted wells, exploding houses, and earthquakes—an environmental
disaster in the making. These anti-frackers have a simple solution: ban
it. In contrast, industry supporters see hydraulic fracturing as a safe
technology that drillers have been using for decades without controversy
and that now promises a new era of energy abundance. The pro-frackers,
too, have a simple solution: get the government out of the way and drill
baby, drill.
As an economist, I see something still different: a familiar pattern of negative externalities and missing market signals, to which the appropriate response is unlikely to be either prohibition or laissez-faire. >>>Read more
As an economist, I see something still different: a familiar pattern of negative externalities and missing market signals, to which the appropriate response is unlikely to be either prohibition or laissez-faire. >>>Read more
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)