Apr 12 2013

Does inflation matter? The real cost of living for middle class Americans. Fed on path to growing balance sheet to $4 trillion.

Does inflation matter?  If you ask this question to the Fed, it appears like it doesn’t.  The Fed is doing everything it can to stoke the fires of inflation.  Instead, what it is doing is causing further asset bubbles and misallocation of capital in markets.  For most people the cost of living is becoming more expensive.  Tuition costs are soaring, healthcare is extremely expensive, energy costs have reached a new level, and incomes are stalled.  It is hard to see how inflation is a good thing when incomes get stuck but it is also part of the plan.  The psychology of inflation is excellent for a consumer driven economy.  If you think prices are going to go up tomorrow, you are more likely to spend today.  Falling prices cause consumers to hoard.  So the Fed is trying to manufacture more spending but this only works if underlying household incomes move up as well.  Inflation for most, does matter.

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Apr 8 2013

Food service workers at a record high in US economy: Record percent of Americans now employed in food services as a share of total employment coupled with peak food stamp usage.

One of biggest contributors to jobs over the last few years has come from the low-wage food service sector.  A record 7.6 percent of Americans now work in food services and drinking places.  Given that we have 47+ million Americans on food stamps and this figure has boomed in the last decade, it should come as no surprise that as Abraham Maslow would have it, people are reverting to the basic necessities of life.  Yet there is a larger story of our economic recovery.  There was a McDonald’s hiring a cashier but looking for someone with a college degree.  Welcome to the low wage recovery.  A large part of America is simply trying to get by and this population is growing.  Those that frequent financial sites on the net are probably a very small part of the overall population.  So I know it comes as a surprise to some readers when they realize the per capita wage in the US is $26,000.  I’m sure this record percent of Americans in the food services industry must come as a shock as well.

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Apr 6 2013

Where did the American worker go? 663,000 people were removed from the labor force pushing the figure to 90 million Americans not looking for work.

The employment report was very weak no matter how you sliced it.  The unemployment rate fell but this was largely driven by an incredibly large number of people dropping out of the labor force.  This recession has been extremely tough on US households.  The recession was technically over in the summer of 2009 which seems like an eternity ago.  However, the recession was over for a small group of Americans.  Labor force participation is now down to where it was in 1979!  The report was abysmal no matter how you diced it and this is coming on years of the Fed shoveling trillions of dollars to their friendly neighbor banks.  This was supposedly the recipe for recovery but a recovery for which group?  Certainly not the typical American family.  We have all these measures of distress hitting high levels: people on disability, about 15 percent of our population on food stamps, and labor force participation down to 63.3 percent.  This is what happens when 663,000 people drop out of the labor force.  Where did the workers go?

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Apr 4 2013

The un-American savings rate: Americans savings rate heads to a record low. Americans saving about 2 percent per year and the near extinct pension.

For a brief period during the height of the recession, Americans resorted to saving more money as credit markets around the world tightened up.  As data is now showing, this turned out to be a very brief anomaly in the market.  Americans are back to not saving money.  The debt markets are creeping back in and since household incomes are back to levels last seen in the 1990s adjusting for inflation, many people are simply supplementing this lack of income growth with high levels of debt.  This works out for a brief period but when the savings rate is near 2 percent, close to a record low, you realize that many people are simply living day to day and using debt as a bridge to having access to a certain standard of living. The two-income household is almost a necessity for a middle class lifestyle.  So why is it that Americans living in the richest nation on the planet, have such a hard time saving?

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