Ooops! Dow Jones re-knacks 10,000 mark, what a festivity at media outlets!The inflation outlook from the monetary and fiscal standpoint looks truly deflationary, yet some believe that dollar weakness will reverse this circumstance and create inflation. This is unlikely. First, our imports are about 13% of GDP, and even if the dollar were to halve in value, the price of imported goods would not only have to compete with U.S. producers, but also their price adjustment would have to offset the other 87% of factors included in the pricing indices. Second, unlike the 1930's a 50% decline in the dollar would be difficult to engineer. Fisher recommended to Roosevelt that the U.S. should exit the gold standard, which he did in April of 1933. That was a fixed exchange rate system, and within three months the dollar lost more than 30% against the gold block countries and fell to 60% of its former value within the next five months. This spurred our exports and provided some price inflation (2.9% per year, GDP deflator) for the next four years. Then, in 1937 the tax increases (the next policy mistake) reversed the positive growth rate of the economy and drove price levels and economic activity downward again. However, even with that small period of price increases the overall price level never recovered from the 25% decline that occurred from 1929 to 1933, and thus deflation reigned. Today the declining dollar is a good thing in terms of our trade balance, but the modest change will be insufficient to offset the negative forces of insufficient domestic demand.
Next year the core GDP deflator will fall to zero, with the possibility of negative levels.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Reading Hoisington's Ponzi Finance
These are two different worlds - real time action in equities and the deep deflationary thoughts at Hoisington. This time the quarterly review and outlook is labeled "Ponzi Finance". Everyone is advised to read the entire report. However, I will quote the opinion on the "USD debasement effects":
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment