nvidiot
Botanical Jedi
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2010
- Messages
- 2,121
You didn't complain about that when you got your house loan at a lower rate than would otherwise have been the case.
I'm Australian and couldn't afford a mortgage if I wanted to anyway.
You didn't complain about that when you got your house loan at a lower rate than would otherwise have been the case.
big steaming piles you drop
That argument I made would only apply to the USA, your economic conditions are different.I'm Australian and couldn't afford a mortgage if I wanted to anyway.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) kept their estimate of the annualized growth rate of the first quarter 2011 U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) essentially unchanged at 1.84%.
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And once again the BEA used an overall "price deflater" that reflected an annualized inflation rate of 1.9%.
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The importance of the price deflater used by the BEA cannot be overstated. In calculating the "real" GDP the BEA continued to use an overall 1.9% annualized inflation rate, which is substantially lower than the inflation rates being reported by any of the BEA's sister agencies. The mathematical implications of the deflater are simple: a lower deflater creates a higher "real" GDP reading. If April's CPI-U (as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics) of 3.2% year-over-year inflation is used as the deflater, the reported 1.84% annualized growth rate shrinks to a 0.56% annualized rate, and the "real final sales of domestic products" is actually contracting at a 0.63% rate. If instead of the year-over-year CPI-U we were to use the annualized CPI-U from just the first quarter (5.7%), the "real" GDP would be shrinking at a 1.82% annualized rate, and the "real final sales of domestic products" would be contracting at a recession-like 3.01%.
They gambled with other people's lives, money and economic security, lost, and then expected those people to pick up the tab. Sure from the business perspective they won. From everyone else's perspective, they screwed us and laughed while we picked up the pieces.
I'm no economist, but I don't think you need to be one to understand that there were no options available to those in political power other than to try and keep thesemonstersmobsters going. The alternative was simply untenable.
The history of inflations in various countries does not show immediate perception of or understanding of conditions by the population, and more importantly, major market segments.I don't have a dog in this fight, but I'm curious...
If you know all this, and it's that obvious, wouldn't the marketplace know all this? Wouldn't it be built in to the market?
Are they just lying to the average broke-dick citizen to save an erosion of confidence?
The history of inflations in various countries does not show immediate perception of or understanding of conditions by the population, and more importantly, major market segments.
For example, during hyperinflations banks keep lending. They calculate a rate of interest and seem to actually thing they have it right. But they never do have it right.
The propaganda is arguably necessary as it keeps the actual facts obscured until some planned solution can be sprung. There are several big crises in the wings right now that can be "sprung" at any convenient time the government wants.
If you know all this, and it's that obvious
wouldn't the marketplace know all this?
average broke-dick citizen
Well isn't it? It's not a matter of opinion. It's simply a matter of definitions and raw data. And those seem to clearly suggest GDP fell this last quarter, not go up like the government claimed.
One would hope, but it wouldn't be the first time that the market looked at things through rose colored glasses.
And what interest does it serve for the marketplace to broadcast bad news? For stock brokers to broadcast bad news?
Also, this might be a reason why the big companies are not investing but remaining flush with cash ... waiting to see what happens. Why expand output when GDP is still actually falling and looks like it will fall further?
This forum is just filled with "classy" posters.![]()
And I suppose it is a matter of definition, which implies that there are more than just yours.
Real GDP is defined as nominal GDP adjusted for price changes (i.e., inflation or deflation). They are using the same nominal GDP in both calculations so the only difference is in what is considered inflation. I don't know about you, but I've watched prices increase by far more than what BEA used in their calculation (1.9%). The problem is that BEA is using a bogus inflation rate in the calculation to make GDP growth look better than it really is … a rate that doesn't even agree with what other government agencies say it now is. As noted above, using Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers, the inflation rate is over 3 times higher than what BEA assumed. And that's more in line with what Joe Citizen is seeing in stores and at the pump.
Basically, yes. One year CD in Australia is 6%, so why does money not rush from US to Australia? A LOT of money has moved offshore and will continue to, but not enough to indicate the market immediately moves from bad money to good money.But there is no real indication of hyperinflation -- only the prospects of it.
Why are 5yr Greece bonds at 14% and US notes at 1.60%? Is it that the major market segment is fooled on the US but not on Greece?
One argument is that a huge amount of money that went to the banks to "ensure liquidity" was circuituous, they reinvested in treasuries...Thanks for the explanation.
Do you think credit contraction could offset this? Doesn't M3 contain this component and isn't it possible that another wave of credit contraction could unfold?
One argument is that a huge amount of money that went to the banks to "ensure liquidity" was circuituous, they reinvested in treasuries...
That money is dormant from the velocity point of view. But how could it ever be given back to the government?
The banks would have to cease taking Tbills in that amount, while maintaining their required liquidity rations. And the banks are not going to start calling in loans to keep the ratio as required. If they did, that would be a "credit contraction".
But people react to what they perceive. If people react to the government printing trillions by buying metals, saving instead of spending, and paying off loans, they are reacting rationally.
Similarly, if they react to printing 10s of trillions by dumping dollars as soon as they get them, that's a rational action in self interest.
The typical (wrong) responses from government are things like wage and price controls, clamping down on money moving out of the country, confiscating pension and retirement funds, restricting ownership of or trading in foreign currencies, restricting withdrawals from bank accounts. Historically.
There is some hope, as we are seeing right now in Congress with the discussion on the debt ceiling limit. Not a lot, but some. Brazil, incidentally, experienced hyperinflation and came out of it very strong. How did they do it?
They made it a felony for anyone to loan money to their federal government....
The White House downplayed a disappointing May jobs report Friday that showed unemployment inched up to 9.1 percent, with President Obama's chief economist Austan Goolsbee calling the latest number one of the "bumps on the road to recovery."