Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
"Will These Central Bank Morons Ever Learn?" asks Albert Edwards at Societe General Posted: 27 Oct 2014 11:50 AM PDT Central Banks and the Business Cycle I like it when someone besides a few financial bloggers takes the gloves off and starts asking some hard-hitting questions. In Cross Asset Research last week, Albert Edwards at Societe General did just that. Emphasis in italics is mine. Fragile and vulnerable in itself, the US recovery now battles against the rest of the world, which like a horror movie is dragging it down into a hellish Ice Age underworld. The problem is that at these stratospheric valuations, the market does not need to suffer an ACTUAL recession to see a crash. Like October 1987, just the fear of recession will be enough to trigger a massive market move.Other Economic Illiterates Just two days before Albert penned the above, a reader sent me a link to the Salon article America's ugly economic truth: Why austerity is generating another slowdown by David Dayen. Austerity amid recovery has been a disaster everywhere it's been tried, and the fact that America's course looks better right now than the more calamitous policy choices in Europe or the rest of the world brings little comfort. Anyway, a global slowdown, which appears to be the current path absent concerted action, will inevitably hit us at home.US vs. Europe For starters, austerity has never been tried. Deficit spending is still rampant in Europe. Dayden never mentions the structural problems with the euro itself, Europe's demographics, or productivity differences between France and Germany (mainly stemming from socialism and inane work rules). Instead, like most economic illiterates, Dayen believes Europe can spend its way out of trouble. The fact of the matter is fiscal stimulus adds to deficits and any alleged improvement comes at enormous expense down the line. Then, as soon as the stimulus stops, guess what happens. Compounding the problem, union work rules add to the cost of stimulus. Europe and the US both need to address massive overpayment of government workers vs. the private sector. Fix the structural problems and most of the rest will take care of itself. Dayden cheers the U.S. recovery vs. Europe. He overlooks the massive bubbles in stocks and corporate bonds. US vs. Japan Dayden wants more stimulus. Pray tell, what the hell do you call interest rates at zero and trillion dollar deficits for years? Dayden is too bleeping blind to see that Japan tried things his way and failed. All Japan has to show for decades of deflation fighting is debt to GDP over 250%, the highest of any major county, by far. He also fails to note the housing bubble is a direct result of the Fed not taking its medicine in 2000 and 2001. Academic Wonderland The idea that the Fed can eliminate the business cycle is clearly idiotic (bubbles of increasing magnitude in 2000, 2007, and now should be proof enough). Nonetheless, that is precisely what the vast majority of economic writers believe. The writers all live in Academic Wonderland after years of Keynesian teaching. Only those who believe in voodoo can get a job at a central bank. In contrast, the average seventh-grader can see that building bridges to nowhere and overpaying for labor on top of it is doomed to fail. Taught to be Stupid You have to be taught to be stupid! I have discussed these points before, most recently in James Grant Conference Video: Inflation Expectations, Growth, Policy Problems; Europe Has Become Japan. On October 19, I wrote Challenge to Keynesians "Prove Rising Prices Provide an Overall Economic Benefit" in response to an article in the Financial Times. Will the Morons Ever Learn? Albert Edwards asked "Will These Morons Ever Learn?" I added the implied words "Central Bank", but need to remove them. Just three days ago Hillary Clinton stated "Don't Let Anyone Tell You It's Corporations and Businesses that Create Jobs". How moronic is that statement? Keynesian and monetary fools are in complete control of academia, central banks, and most media. Will the morons learn? Unfortunately, no. Why? Because they are morons, and by definition they can't. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 27 Oct 2014 10:26 AM PDT On October 24, while campaigning for Martha Coakley for governor of Massachusetts, Hillary Clinton made one of the most absurd political statements in history "Don't Let Anyone Tell You It's Corporations and Businesses that Create Jobs." Clinton continued, "You know that old theory, trickledown economics. That has been tried, that has failed. It has failed rather spectacularly. One of the things my husband says when people say, 'What did you bring to Washington?' He says, 'I brought arithmetic.'" Wow. Just in case you think that quote is out of context, here's a video clip courtesy of Town Hall; If Hillary wins the Democratic nomination, expect to see that clip, over and over and over. Is she really stupid enough to believe what she said? I leave it up to the reader to decide, but 100% without a doubt, Hillary believes big government, more regulation, and higher taxes are the key ingredients to growth. Clinton calls trickle down a "spectacular failure". I propose this 10-item alternative list. I could easily expand the list to 100 items, all of which can be attributed to buckets 1, 2, 3, and 10. Ten Spectacular Failures
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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