Is deleting history is unhelpful?

12,317 Views | 166 Replies | Last: 4 mo ago by Beer Baron
88Warrior
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Macarthur said:

No doubt there are multiple contributing factors, but I've read numerous articles that claim that the issues w supply chains, transportation, etc from the pandemic are not really a factor anymore.


Definitely still having supply chain issues as I am seeing them with my own eyes…(I'm in oil and gas.). especially with electronics and like components…
BusterAg
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AG
Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

If you guys are really arguing that inflation hasn't really been all that bad over the last 4 years, I have nothing else to say.
Couple of things:


Yes, inflation has been an issue, but US businesses have recorded record profits quarter after quarter since the pandemic. There has to be a conversation about some level of price gouging going on.

Inflation has been better in the US than many other parts of the world.

https://www.investopedia.com/inflation-rates-us-and-the-world-7369986
1) When you are comparing U.S. inflation as almost as good as Brazil inflation, something is amiss, for multiple reasons, including their maturity as an economy, their history of governmental corruption, and their historical inflation rates.

2) I don't believe for a second that reported inflation rates are all that accurate. I challenge the idea that, for the majority of the economy, real profits by sector have been exuberant.

3) The idea that "price gouging" could explain any meaningful amount of excess profits for and entire economy for over 5 years is not consistent with historical observations. The market really is fairly efficient in most sectors.
Macarthur
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I would argue that in many sectors we don't have anything even resembling a fair and/or efficient market.
AgLiving06
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It's not price gouging.

There's two very logical things going on here.

First, the government has given away trillions of dollars in freebees + they are still trying to give billions more away by canceling student loans. This means a huge surplus of cash available to spend. Demand is significantly increased.

Second, business have two primary options:

1. Increase price to maximize profit from this incrased demand
2. Increase production to create more supply to meet the demand.

I suspect most businesses are looking at this situation and saying that the demand is artificially inflated due to the excess cash being pushed into the market, and so spending money to increase production for a temporary increase in demand does not make sense. So they raise the price.

Will there be eventual pressure on the raw materials that close the profit gap. Yes, but depending on the contracts/ownership structure, that lags behind.

So none of this "should" be particularly surprising. It's the natural outcome of pumping unnecessary money into the economy. It's why we all laugh when economic illiterate people argue that we need to just raise wages to a "living wage" without understanding that's just going to lead to increases in prices.
Aggrad08
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BusterAg said:

Can you please find me a thread started by Seamaster where he said that legitimizing gay marriage was going to lead to people teaching homosexually is appropriate to grade schoolers, and many posters said that this is a ridiculous slippery slope argument that would never happen.

Trust me when I say dozens of these existed at one time.



As posted above I think you are misremembering. Those posts were always about how pedophilia will be normalized, polygamy would shortly follow, and traditional marriages would rapidly decline due to gays fundamentally changing the meaning and value of marriage.


To your basic question, yes I think it's good to have these predictions time capsuled. But to turn your point back at you, do you agree that the predictions made by seamaster et al in those threads provided have not come to pass?
Zobel
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Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Zobel
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AG
https://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/john-bull-and-two-percent

good article about interest rates
ramblin_ag02
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Zobel said:

Absolutely the S&P is an indicator of inflation, though. Inflation calculation is just a benchmark, it's all relative.

Money in the bank is liquid - for the bank! It enables loans, and lowers the cost of capital for borrowers. Money in stocks is liquid - for the company! It is capital, equity for cash, and functions exactly like a loan with an expected return, either in equity value increase or a dividend, which are really the same thing related by net present value and interest rates.

Part of what we're experiencing now is a capital crunch caused by baby boomers removing their capital from the markets en masse. Less capital means higher borrowing costs, more people competing for fewer dollars - higher interest rates.
So if the S&P and the money in bank accounts are also indicators of inflation, then where do we track wealth creation? Why do people generally view high stock prices as "good" but a higher CPI as "bad" if both are just indicators of inflation? Not trying to come across as critical. I'm just curious. You always hear that high stock prices and high levels of capital investment are signals of a good economy, while a high consumer price index is a signal of a bad economy
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ramblin_ag02
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BusterAg said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

Quote:

Running with that thought, it seems that most if not all civilizations are only stable when land, wealth, power, etc are all very concentrated. When someone outside the upper class gets enough of these things, you tend to see instability. See France 1790 or Russia 1917. A powerful middle class is a historically destabilizing influence. It's a sad commentary on humanity if true and if you believe in the notion of fairness and equality, but I can't get around the apparent historical trend.

How do you explain the economic miracle of the U.S. between 1945 and 2008? Super-strong middle class during that time period, especially around the meat of the good years, between 1960 and 2000.
I'm not an economist by training or trade. But I would chalk it up to 2 things. We single handedly financed the winning side of the most expensive war in history WW2. After we won, we were able to get repayments from both allies and enemies alike. That carried us through the lat 40's to the early 60's. At that point, the Baby Boomers entered the labor force like a titanic wave until about 1980. You can chart a steady downward trend in the purchasing power of a single working individual from about 1975 to the present. The large scale entrance of women into the workforce starting in the 1980s brought a second income to a lot of homes and drove up the numbers of people in the labor force. So it masked the fact that a single working person could no longer support a Simpons lifestyle. We're just now coming to a point where two educated working individuals have trouble supporting a Simpsons lifestyle, and seems like a major stress point and possible breaking point to me.
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ramblin_ag02
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Yes, but...

Here's an article about how low interest rates gives bad faith actors improved purchase power due to being able to more easily borrow money against already leveraged capital.

https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/22/koteswar-jay-gajavelli/#if-you-ever-go-to-houston

The author is very left wing, but he's also very smart. If you can look past the political bias, the facts are pretty scary
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Zobel
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Quote:

So if the S&P and the money in bank accounts are also indicators of inflation, then where do we track wealth creation? Why do people generally view high stock prices as "good" but a higher CPI as "bad" if both are just indicators of inflation? Not trying to come across as critical. I'm just curious. You always hear that high stock prices and high levels of capital investment are signals of a good economy, while a high consumer price index is a signal of a bad economy
Inflation is not a monolithic thing. Prices are in flux, all the time. Think of it as information - price is just the current value, in one moment, at each transaction. "The Price" of something is just the market aggregation of that.

So it's pretty easy to say - what is the price of a stock? That gets you dollars per share. Now, what is the price of a gallon of milk? That's dollars per gallon. If a stock doubles relative to milk, was there inflation? What if the milk doubles relative to the stock? The answer is "maybe" to both. That's why they create indices, and multiples, to generalize price levels relative to some benchmark somewhere.

People view stock prices as good for a couple of reasons, I think. One, is because a lot of people are economically illiterate, and most people don't get inflation anyway -- its insidious. Two, a large amount of Americans have a good chunk of their wealth in equities, so that number going up makes them happy. Equities are liquid and prices are not sticky, so they reflect inflation well. The real reason to invest in equities, in my mind, is that they do track inflation. If the stock market is going up much faster than real GDP, that is inflationary. Long term the net present value of a huge chunk of our economy can't outgrow real growth.

I think it makes sense to stop and remember what prices of stocks actually are, too. The concept of net present value is critical here. So if you take the actual cash generated by a company, the return on the capital you're giving, and make it a periodic cash flow in time it has a net present value depending on the interest rate, the cost of capital. Stocks can only change value for two reasons - one is that the market "thinks" that they have made some kind of change that increased or decreased the total cash flows that will be generated, and two is because the interest rate changed.

Think about the interest rate as a risk indicator. The higher the interest rate the higher perceived risk. So when the market makes big moves, what we're seeing is not company a or b suddenly generating more cash, but the overall risk, and therefore the time value of money, changing. If the market goes down, that means in aggregate the net present values of all the cash flows the market will ever give went down in price - i.e., interest rates went up. And vice versa.

Actually - I lied. There is a third reason prices can move, and that is because we price them in dollars, of course. So if you suddenly doubled the number of dollars in the world, their relative value would halve, and the stock prices (and the prices of everything else) would reflect that change.

Stock prices are prices just like anything else, they're just a little more ethereal because what is being priced is future profit instead of something tangible like socks or donuts or a pencil.

So why do stock prices going up mean a good economy? That tells us either companies are getting more profitable in aggregate, or perceived risk is low. In times of risk capital flies to lower risk, quality investments. Capital becoming cheaper means people, in aggregate, feel less risk.
Zobel
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Quote:

Here's an article about how artificially low interest rates gives bad faith actors improved purchase power due to being able to more easily borrow money against already leveraged capital.
fify.

Interest rate is just the price of money. Prices are real, actual things. Every time someone agrees to a transaction out of their own free will, price is set. If someone wants to loan you money for 4%, that is the price of money for you. If that's too high, and you agree on 3%, that's the price of money now.

The problem is that we have artificial price controls on capital. Sometimes they get the price wrong. Just like artificial price controls for anything else, this distorts the market. If the government arbitrarily made the price of polo shirts less than what they should be, people would buy more polo shirts than they need. Or, companies would leave the polo shirt business for lack of profit and prices would "want" to go back up as supply decreased. "Bad faith actors" may notice that polo shirts are artificially cheap and buy them for resale for other things. If you do it the other way and arbitrarily make the price high, you get the opposite issues.

When you suddenly remove that constraint, suddenly you have too many or too few polos, or some weird business that was profitable trading polos for picture frames makes no more sense and goes out of business. Malinvestment, which leads to destruction of capital.

Interest rates are exactly the same thing, except artificially low or high interest rates enable all kinds of mischief, in all kinds of opposite errors, by encouraging or discouraging the appropriate amount of investment and distorting the price and risk signal associated with them.
Beer Baron
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Quote:

3) Germany just decriminalized child porn this week.

This seemed like BS, and sure enough, five minutes on Google showed it is.

https://www.newsweek.com/fact-check-did-germany-decriminalize-child-porn-possession-1904142

The maximum penalty wasn't touched by the new law, they just lowered the minimum to give judges a discretionary off ramp for situations like minors sending a dirty pic to their boyfriend/girlfriend, or someone finding something bad and forwarding it to authorities. Despite the spin, this isn't seamaster's fear come to life. And on the subject of him, we're getting pretty close to my steak dinner based on some of those older threads.
Rongagin71
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AG
There may be another side to this story...
Edit - go to 8:30 mark to skip intro.
BusterAg
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AG
Aggrad08 said:





To your basic question, yes I think it's good to have these predictions time capsuled. But to turn your point back at you, do you agree that the predictions made by seamaster et al in those threads provided have not come to pass?
Not really. As with most predictions, they were in the right direction, just a bit off the mark.

I don't think anyone saw the ***** / boob chopping block coming in 2019 for our young adults. Nor the pronoun craze. Nor the amount of normalization of transgenderism in public schools. Pedophilia itself was off the table, so the crazy lefties are just biting around the edges wherever they can.

Also, pedophilia is becoming less stigmatized, right? Minor attracted person? What the hell?
BusterAg
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Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.
Macarthur
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BusterAg said:

Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.

I find this a very cynical take. It strikes me as odd that when we have tough times, any help given out to those at the bottom of the ladder is vilified and talked down to, but bailing out banks and billion dollar companies is seen as vital to our economy. If you have any wonder why these younger generations are more jaded and aren't fallling into line with what have been our 'working norms', look no futher than this type of attitude.
BusterAg
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AG
ramblin_ag02 said:

Zobel said:

Absolutely the S&P is an indicator of inflation, though. Inflation calculation is just a benchmark, it's all relative.

Money in the bank is liquid - for the bank! It enables loans, and lowers the cost of capital for borrowers. Money in stocks is liquid - for the company! It is capital, equity for cash, and functions exactly like a loan with an expected return, either in equity value increase or a dividend, which are really the same thing related by net present value and interest rates.

Part of what we're experiencing now is a capital crunch caused by baby boomers removing their capital from the markets en masse. Less capital means higher borrowing costs, more people competing for fewer dollars - higher interest rates.
So if the S&P and the money in bank accounts are also indicators of inflation, then where do we track wealth creation? Why do people generally view high stock prices as "good" but a higher CPI as "bad" if both are just indicators of inflation? Not trying to come across as critical. I'm just curious. You always hear that high stock prices and high levels of capital investment are signals of a good economy, while a high consumer price index is a signal of a bad economy
It's not that the S&P index is in of itself a good or bad signal for inflation. Some key questions are what is the price / earnings ratio, and what is the real return of the index?

Super high CPI increase, small S&P increase = negative real return to equity. Say your stock increases by 4% in two years, but inflation is 100%. So, your stock you bought in 2024 for $100 is worth $104 in 2026, however, your $104 in 2026 can only buy you what $52 dollars could have bought you in 2024. You lost. Real return was around negative 49%.

Huge increase in S&P500, but also huge increase in P/E ratio = bubble. Market expectations are that future earnings are going to be great. That might happen. That might not. But, what hasn't happened is that "wealth" has not been created, at least not in the form of GDP output.

So, the issue is that you have to look at real returns to S&P500, not nominal returns. And to do that, you have to have a reasonable measure of inflation. CPI is not all that great, because it does not include the cost of borrowing money, which is important, in my opinion.
Rongagin71
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AG
Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.

I find this a very cynical take. It strikes me as odd that when we have tough times, any help given out to those at the bottom of the ladder is vilified and talked down to, but bailing out banks and billion dollar companies is seen as vital to our economy. If you have any wonder why these younger generations are more jaded and aren't fallling into line with what have been our 'working norms', look no futher than this type of attitude.
You have a point but there is very little criticism of helping the actual poor.
The criticism is of wasting trillions of tax dollars on buying both the poor AND the rich.
Macarthur
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I agree that there should have been some means testing but the gov was trying to err on the side of getting $ to people quickly.

And I agree with your overall point but my point still stands. Why is helping one group looked at differently than the other? And I think there needs to be a distinction with regards to 'helping the poor'. There are millions of people that are NOT poor, but if they miss one or two paychecks, it would be devastating to them and their family.

Another broader point is how much some of you have thought about how quickly our society could turn into chaos. Using the Covid example, if money had not been in the hands of the working class, how quickly could things have gone south in a big way? Seriously, I think many folks haven't thought about the logical end game of their mindset in this regard.
Zobel
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AG

Quote:

Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

One, you're only considering first order effects. The money spent on steel, concrete, etc doesn't stop there. Those vendors deliver cash to their shareholders and employees, who buy red bull, funyuns, doritos, etc. And in both cases, those companies deliver cash to their shareholders and employees, and so on. So your comment of "There is no payback to the economy" is simply incorrect.

Two, in the case of the bridge, it is either needed or it isn't. I drove down the most beautiful freeway I have ever been on in China and passed by huge buildings that were completely empty. The car I was in was the only car I saw on that freeway for a couple of hours. That freeway did absolutely nothing, it was malinvestment, wasted capital. That also has nth order effects, because it creates a false demand signal for steel and concrete and trades. There is no magic type of subsidy that a command economy can perfectly apply.

Go back to my earlier comment that the person who benefits most from any stimulus / subsidy is the first person who gets it. In either scenario - good bridge investment or bad - the shareholders and employees of the first company benefit the most. But if it is a bad bridge investment they receive a disproportionate benefit than if it is good. If you put money in the hypothetical hands of every individual, everyone's purchasing power is increased at the same time until general inflation causes prices to catch up. Everyone benefits the same, for a short while.

It begs the question - if the government can spend money on infrastructure at will, with no penalty and obtain economic growth without end why would you ever stop? The simple answer is because you can't, any more than increasing the minimum wage indefinitely create economic growth. China is a great example of this kind of folly.
AGC
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AG
Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.

I find this a very cynical take. It strikes me as odd that when we have tough times, any help given out to those at the bottom of the ladder is vilified and talked down to, but bailing out banks and billion dollar companies is seen as vital to our economy. If you have any wonder why these younger generations are more jaded and aren't fallling into line with what have been our 'working norms', look no futher than this type of attitude.


Do people in poverty change their habits during tough times? The answer is predominantly no; in fact, the reason they're given money for stimulus is precisely because they blow through it. The mentality of, 'I have this today but won't tomorrow so I should spend it' isn't some imagined stigma. Our BJJ gym changed with stimmy money and went back to the pre-existing 'normal' after.

You need to step outside your worldview to evaluate these decisions. Note that this isn't a defense of bank bailouts, nor to be misconstrued as standing in contrast to any general public policy or idea. I'm just engaging with your, 'but the poor!!' sentiment. Their lot is not materially improved and they're still a check or two from disaster.

Edit: not giving them money would have forced some re-evaluation of Covid policies that caused all this in the first place. It was shutting everything down that caused this. If chaos is on the table you could always open it up and let people make their own decisions. You don't get the benefit of making all the right decisions in hindsight and not getting punished for what's going on now as a result. It's the fault of those who shut down the country that we're here.
Zobel
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AG
I'm not sure it is relevant - y'all are imposing some kind of desirability onto the spending based on the first order effect of the stimulus. I don't think that's the right way to think about it. I think what matters is the overall effect of the money.

Giving the same amount of capital to wealthy people who turn around and put it into equities probably has much less of a short term economic impact than giving it to poor people who buy Doritos with it.

The bigger point though is that none of that matters, because no matter what you do eventually the average price levels in the economy will increase to reflect the additional money in the system. It is completely unavoidable, a mathematical certainty. The only difference you can make with where you inject the money is who benefits the most and the soonest (whether that is the people receiving the stimulus directly or the first order beneficiaries of the spending).
Aggrad08
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AG
BusterAg said:

Aggrad08 said:





To your basic question, yes I think it's good to have these predictions time capsuled. But to turn your point back at you, do you agree that the predictions made by seamaster et al in those threads provided have not come to pass?
Not really. As with most predictions, they were in the right direction, just a bit off the mark.


A bit off the mark? Really? Normalization of pedophilia isn't anywhere close to happing. Polygamy isn't close to happening. A collapse of marriage isn't close to happening.

The only "direction" is that the world has got more progressive, which absolutely no one would contest as it's a pretty every present trend.


Quote:

I don't think anyone saw the ***** / boob chopping block coming in 2019 for our young adults.

The T part of LGBT isn't new. The amount of political attention it garnered has skyrocketed, and there has been backlash on that, including the pronoun stuff which is already tapering off.



Quote:

Nor the pronoun craze. Nor the amount of normalization of transgenderism in public schools. Pedophilia itself was off the table, so the crazy lefties are just biting around the edges wherever they can.

Read that again and see how crazy it sounds. You are literally saying, that people who disagree with you on gay marriage secretly want to normalize sex with children but felt that was untenable so have instead sought progressive policies in completely unrelated areas? Do you really think that's what happens?

Quote:

Also, pedophilia is becoming less stigmatized, right? Minor attracted person? What the hell?

It really isn't. And we can probably find old threads where people empathize with the fact that it's probably not an active intellectual choice that someone is attracted to kids, but that it's also just too damn bad, they don't get to act on it.
ramblin_ag02
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AG
Zobel said:

I'm not sure it is relevant - y'all are imposing some kind of desirability onto the spending based on the first order effect of the stimulus. I don't think that's the right way to think about it. I think what matters is the overall effect of the money.

Giving the same amount of capital to wealthy people who turn around and put it into equities probably has much less of a short term economic impact than giving it to poor people who buy Doritos with it.

The bigger point though is that none of that matters, because no matter what you do eventually the average price levels in the economy will increase to reflect the additional money in the system. It is completely unavoidable, a mathematical certainty. The only difference you can make with where you inject the money is who benefits the most and the soonest (whether that is the people receiving the stimulus directly or the first order beneficiaries of the spending).
I was going to post something stupid, but decided against it after a bit of research. The average GDP growth from 1960 to today has been 3.35% annually, but the annual inflation rate has been 3.8%. So for 64 years we have been losing economic ground by 0.45% annually on average. But the stock market has been growth 10+% per year. So somehow the stock market has been outpacing inflation over that time even though the GDP has not. So why isn't that corporate liquidity driving inflation?
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Macarthur
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AGC said:

Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.

I find this a very cynical take. It strikes me as odd that when we have tough times, any help given out to those at the bottom of the ladder is vilified and talked down to, but bailing out banks and billion dollar companies is seen as vital to our economy. If you have any wonder why these younger generations are more jaded and aren't fallling into line with what have been our 'working norms', look no futher than this type of attitude.


Do people in poverty change their habits during tough times? The answer is predominantly no; in fact, the reason they're given money for stimulus is precisely because they blow through it. The mentality of, 'I have this today but won't tomorrow so I should spend it' isn't some imagined stigma. Our BJJ gym changed with stimmy money and went back to the pre-existing 'normal' after.

You need to step outside your worldview to evaluate these decisions. Note that this isn't a defense of bank bailouts, nor to be misconstrued as standing in contrast to any general public policy or idea. I'm just engaging with your, 'but the poor!!' sentiment. Their lot is not materially improved and they're still a check or two from disaster.

Edit: not giving them money would have forced some re-evaluation of Covid policies that caused all this in the first place. It was shutting everything down that caused this. If chaos is on the table you could always open it up and let people make their own decisions. You don't get the benefit of making all the right decisions in hindsight and not getting punished for what's going on now as a result. It's the fault of those who shut down the country that we're here.

Again, you using terms like 'blowing through money' shows me that YOU are the one that needs to step outside your world view. I think it's staggeringly ignorant of what the lower middle class and working poor deal with on a daily basis.

ramblin_ag02
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AG
I agree with your post, but just want to add one thing. The global trend towards progressiveness that you witness is not some inevitable, passive phenomenon brought about by empathy, goodwill, and open-mindeded. If only that were the case. Instead, the progressive movement, especially in regards to sexuality, gender and race, has been aggressively exported by the United States at nearly the level of an evangelical crusade. US Embassies fly pride flags in nations like the UAE. We hold monetary aide unless countries update their social laws to comply with our wishes. None of this is new, but all the old machinery of the Cold War used to promote capitalism worldwide is now being used to promote these causes. It's really quite remarkable in that less than 10 years we've gone from approving gay marriage in the US to putting all our economic and diplomatic pressure on other nations to follow suit.

I'm not making a value judgement here on any of this. As a Christian who has a heart for victimized and exploited people, it's a complicated issue for me. But we shouldn't act like the entire world is coming around on these issues and that it's a natural consequence of being more civilized. It's been a directed and dedicated effort for which a lot of NGOs and activitists deserve credit or blame depending on your viewpoint. It is also been limited to places where the US has heavy influence. Russia and China and their spheres of influence are openly contemptuous of all of these issues, for example.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Sapper Redux
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BusterAg said:

Aggrad08 said:





To your basic question, yes I think it's good to have these predictions time capsuled. But to turn your point back at you, do you agree that the predictions made by seamaster et al in those threads provided have not come to pass?
Not really. As with most predictions, they were in the right direction, just a bit off the mark.

I don't think anyone saw the ***** / boob chopping block coming in 2019 for our young adults. Nor the pronoun craze. Nor the amount of normalization of transgenderism in public schools. Pedophilia itself was off the table, so the crazy lefties are just biting around the edges wherever they can.

Also, pedophilia is becoming less stigmatized, right? Minor attracted person? What the hell?
Wait, do you think transgender people just emerged in 2019? No, it became the conservative cause du jour around then.
Beer Baron
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AG


Quote:

Pedophilia itself was off the table,

It still is.


Quote:

so the crazy lefties are just biting around the edges wherever they can.

No they're not. Fighting for the rights of LGBT people is not an end-run to piggieback pedophilia into the mainstream.


Quote:

Also, pedophilia is becoming less stigmatized, right?

You cite this as if it's fact and not just the insane claim of hysterical people.


Quote:

Minor attracted person? What the hell?
This isn't a term with any actual traction. It's used by 2 types of people: a very small group of vocal pedophiles who are trying to co-opt the LGBT rights movement with no success at actually doing so, and people like you who are eager to magnify their claims and give them legitimacy every chance they get.

As usual, media feeds Christians the latest thing they should be enraged by or terrified of, and they dutifully accept it as a widespread problem, obsess over it, and give it so much more attention than it deserves. It's just the Satanic Panic of the 80s repackaged. It's why otherwise intelligent people hear something like "Germany decriminalized child porn," and immediately repeat it as fact without actually looking into what really happened. It fits your preconceived notion that pedophiles are organizing and gaining influence, so you just accept it and spread it on to the next person who will do the same.
AGC
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AG
Macarthur said:

AGC said:

Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

Zobel said:


Quote:

In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.
You'd have to do quite a bit of analysis to find out the answer to that question. Capital projects aren't guaranteed to be a more efficient allocation of excess capital than consumer spending. See: China over the past few decades. Malinvestment is a real thing.

Forget what is being purchased - consider them as flat products. Whether we're talking about a bridge, or a new factory, or a pair of socks. There is supply and demand, and each product has second and third and n-th order effects after initial purchase as that money moves through the economy.

I would actually suppose that injecting that money at the lowest possible level is likely to be more efficient in aggregate in the allocation of capital, because you're linking the new supply with demand. The counterpoint to this is that you're also creating marginal demand for otherwise unneeded products (i.e., luxury goods) once baseline demands is met. That would create an inefficiency in the form of a false signal to the market for the demand for those things. But... capital projects do the exact same thing, unless they are actually needed. Or, if there is no immediate needs, that money can be put to use as capital and cause, say, an equities bubble.

The best way to inject money is simply to lower the interest rate. This makes money less expensive in general and leaves the market free to allocate it to where it is needed. But, there is still a moral hazard artificially low interest rates, because projects on the margins of "true" economic viability cross the bar, and you get malinvestment.



Quote:

Quote:

The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.
If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.
Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.

this is not a thing, at least not at this level. any and all government spending has this exact same effect. it doesn't matter whether it is a capital project or not. this is an argument against stimulus in general (which I agree with).
Only the government is going to build that bridge that is going to unlock the potential of undeveloped land just over the river from the major commerce sites and unlock extra tax revenues. If the government builds the bridge, the money will be spent on steel, concrete, cranes time, coffee beans, pocket protectors, and cat memes. That will trickle down to the rest of the economy, yes, but a lot of that cash goes into inputs of production that get consumed in the project.

The payoff is less commuting time, leading to more commerce, leading to higher value real estate, leading to higher property taxes, leading to more civil services, etc. Those are long-term payoffs that happen over time. And, it helps GPD.

In a stimulus check, the money goes to red bully, funyuns, doritos, frozen burritos, manchego, McD's french fries, lobsters, and little league private lessons on curveballs. All of that is consumed immediately. There is no payback to the economy. You are just going to jack up the demand for cheese.

The place where the Austrians sometimes fall down is in practicality. All models are wrong. Some are useful. Those that assume a private company will someday build a bridge are not useful.

I find this a very cynical take. It strikes me as odd that when we have tough times, any help given out to those at the bottom of the ladder is vilified and talked down to, but bailing out banks and billion dollar companies is seen as vital to our economy. If you have any wonder why these younger generations are more jaded and aren't fallling into line with what have been our 'working norms', look no futher than this type of attitude.


Do people in poverty change their habits during tough times? The answer is predominantly no; in fact, the reason they're given money for stimulus is precisely because they blow through it. The mentality of, 'I have this today but won't tomorrow so I should spend it' isn't some imagined stigma. Our BJJ gym changed with stimmy money and went back to the pre-existing 'normal' after.

You need to step outside your worldview to evaluate these decisions. Note that this isn't a defense of bank bailouts, nor to be misconstrued as standing in contrast to any general public policy or idea. I'm just engaging with your, 'but the poor!!' sentiment. Their lot is not materially improved and they're still a check or two from disaster.

Edit: not giving them money would have forced some re-evaluation of Covid policies that caused all this in the first place. It was shutting everything down that caused this. If chaos is on the table you could always open it up and let people make their own decisions. You don't get the benefit of making all the right decisions in hindsight and not getting punished for what's going on now as a result. It's the fault of those who shut down the country that we're here.

Again, you using terms like 'blowing through money' shows me that YOU are the one that needs to step outside your world view. I think it's staggeringly ignorant of what the lower middle class and working poor deal with on a daily basis.




Except that I do, including floating people living in trailer parks. The money gets spent real quick for the exact reason I said. Poverty is as much a mentality as anything else. I did notice you expanded to lower middle class with this answer though. Good day!
AGC
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AG
Zobel said:

I'm not sure it is relevant - y'all are imposing some kind of desirability onto the spending based on the first order effect of the stimulus. I don't think that's the right way to think about it. I think what matters is the overall effect of the money.

Giving the same amount of capital to wealthy people who turn around and put it into equities probably has much less of a short term economic impact than giving it to poor people who buy Doritos with it.

The bigger point though is that none of that matters, because no matter what you do eventually the average price levels in the economy will increase to reflect the additional money in the system. It is completely unavoidable, a mathematical certainty. The only difference you can make with where you inject the money is who benefits the most and the soonest (whether that is the people receiving the stimulus directly or the first order beneficiaries of the spending).


I'm anti-stimulus. We pumped more money into the economy than ever before and Joe's still going with every student loan bailout. Should have kept everything open.
Macarthur
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Of course, I expanded it because it's not just a conversation about "the poor".
Zobel
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AG
Two things there. One, the market index is biased to the upside because companies can be removed. There are always (pretty much) the same number of stocks in the DJIA and S&P 500. Companies get delisted and that isn't reflected in the index. Two, you have to go back to what equities are - net present value of all future free cash flows.

So there are only a couple of ways that can go up. Technological and efficiency improvements can generate new cash flows, new ideas can create new cash flow streams, and effective interest rates (i.e., market perceived risk) can go down, which makes net present values of future cash flows go up. But there is not necessarily ANY cash flow generated from a company in this year, even if the NPV of the company goes up.

GDP is an annual snapshot of all of the final goods and services produced plus investment, government spending, and trade. It can also be thought of as total income - total output minus capital depreciation plus (or minus) net income from outside the country. The total output part of that can only grow by population growth or efficiency improvements.

Stock market growth and GDP growth have no hard, direct link. One is this year's income, the other is the present value of all future income from a selected group of companies. There is a timing element between them, as well as distortion due to trade.

Just because equities go up doesn't mean there's more money created in the system. The company itself only gets an infusion of cash when they issue stock, and that is a transfer from the person with the cash to the company, in exchange for equity which is essentially the promise of future dividends. So there is no necessary inflationary component to the issuance of stock. Thinking about it I suppose in practice that there is probably some effect since the cash will more likely be spent, and spent faster, by the company than an investor. But whatever.

The other piece is that markets are not perfectly efficient. So, as people seek better real returns in the face of inflation equities look more and more interesting and artificially less and less risky (if inflation rates are held below unknowable real rates). That creates a bubble which is not related to the true NPV of future free cash flow.

Lastly. "Annual inflation rate" is just some index. I think you need to look at specific things to see if that is a real indicator of anything. The net national income may not have matched inflation, but some of that is trade, and at the same time purchasing power and standard of living has gone up dramatically as the goods we use to live have decreased. You could not purchase the lifestyle I live today with my car, phone, computer, house amenities, even clothing materials etc, with any amount of money in 1960.
Zobel
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AG
No argument from me.
Pro Sandy
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AG
Sapper Redux said:

The kiosks were being placed before there was any movement on minimum wages and many places are actually removing self-checkout machines because they aren't cost effective and upset customers.
Labor costs have been going up for a while. Here's a 2018 article about mcdonalds kiosks because of minimum wage increases in 2018
https://www.forbes.com/sites/edrensi/2018/07/11/mcdonalds-says-goodbye-cashiers-hello-kiosks/

Another article saying that almost 10,000 fast food jobs cut since the $20/hr bill was signed
https://www.hoover.org/research/california-loses-nearly-10000-fast-food-jobs-after-20-minimum-wage-signed-last-fall

If you want to truly change loves, raising wage alone won't do it because companies must still find ways to make a profit and that could come at your expense. Gaining skills so you have more skilled options, getting an education so you have upward mobility. Those will, raising minimum wage alone will not solve poverty.
 
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