![]() |
Debt of All Sectors relative to M2 Money |
econcrit
CNN, 9 January 2024, has Trump saying "I don’t want to be Herbert Hoover." CNN adds: "The US
stock market crashed during former President Herbert Hoover’s first year in office in 1929, which
signaled the beginning of the Great Depression." See my work on the Trump Depression
Friday, May 23, 2025
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Alt National Park Service
From r/fednews:
Go there.
It's from the Alt National Park Service, which Google's AI Overview calls "a self-described 'resistance' team of the National Park Service".
I saved GAIO's whole response to my inquiry at Google Docs. It includes these links:
- What is the Alt National Park Service? What to know about group protesting Trump layoffs from USA Today, 26 Feb 2025, and
- Their site, AltNPS. The page reads in part: "The Alt National Park Service (AltNPS) was a movement that began around the time of the inauguration of President Donald Trump in January 2017..."
plus a couple Facebook links.
Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Profit per Dollar of Labor Cost
I want to look at profit relative to the cost of labor for nonfinancial corporate business. I'm using datasets from FRED's handy data table, so I know I've got datasets that go together.
The graph below shows profit per dollar of labor cost. It consistently shows low profits (and relatively high labor cost) at recessions, and high profit (and relatively low labor cost) between recessions:
![]() |
The Graph at FRED: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1IPrF |
Profit is now above 30 cents per dollar of labor cost -- and rising in the years since Covid. That puts profit as high today as it was at times in the 1940s, the 1950s, and the 1960s. So I have to ask: If profits are so good, why is our economy so bad? (Excessive private debt, that's my answer: We didn't have excessive household debt in the 40s, 50s, and 60s. In recent decades, however, debt service takes an increasingly hefty chunk of after-tax income. It also eats into business profits.)
Put a straightedge on the lows in the first 50-odd years of data. You see profit in decline for half a century, then increasing since the 2001 recession. Again: If profits have been rising for a generation, why is our economy so bad? And why should we believe Trump when he promises to fix the problem? Is he gonna forgive private-sector debt? Household debt? Student debt, even?
Maybe he will, if we tell him: Tell him it will boost economic growth. But tell him also, it won't do much for the economy unless he forgives a lot of debt. And tell him if he does, it'll be worth his while: With Solon, Trump will be remembered.
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
Inflation (inverted) and the Home Purchase Sentiment Index
I put a minus sign in front of the inflation numbers (to make the Biden inflation go down instead of up) so that I could compare the inflation to the Biden low in the Home Purchase Sentiment Index.
Sentiment is blue; inverted inflation is red:
![]() |
This Graph at FRED: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1IOiF |
The most recognizable event of the past few years is the Biden inflation. The two lines on the graph match up pretty well during that inflation. There is a lag: the path of blue line comes after the red line on the way down (during the rising inflation of 2021, for example) and up again. The lag varies, from 4 months to about a year.
The lag surprises me. Rising prices are immediately obvious to shoppers. But I suppose the impact on home-purchasing decisions has to wait until those decisions are being made.
(I just wanted to see how they match up.)
Monday, May 5, 2025
Sunday, May 4, 2025
Subtracting the Rate of Inflation from Real GDP
In order to see how much the volume of output changes, you have to take price changes out of the numbers. It can't be helped.
Does this mean that I am not allowed to compare Real GDP to the Consumer Price Index? Certainly not.
This
may trouble you, but I want to compare RGDP and the CPI by subtracting
the CPI from RGDP. I want to see how RGDP stands up to that abuse. It is a
simple comparison of the rate of inflation to the rate of growth. But it
doesn't look like it. It looks like I am trying to take inflation out
of Real GDP. You will want to tell me But inflation is already removed from those numbers!
I know you will be tempted to say that, because I am tempted to say it myself. So I have to go around the circle again now and say that I am not removing inflation from RGDP. I am comparing inflation to RGDP. Surely such a thing is allowable.
![]() |
This Graph at FRED: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1IK2v |
The graph uses the annual Real GDP Growth rate, and an annual measure of the inflation rate. I subtract the CPI from RGDP. The first thing you'll notice is a big downtrend from 1965 to 1980. That big downtrend was created by the Great Inflation in those years. We are subtracting big inflation numbers from much smaller RGDP growth figures.
That big downtrend is the most interesting part of the graph. Other than that, the graph shows relatively high values in the years before the Great Inflation, and relatively low values after the Great Inflation. And in those latter years, it seems to me that the graph shows higher values on average from 1983 to 1999 than from 2000 to 2024. I marked up the graph to outline the deep downtrend of the Great Inflation and to show the average value for each of the three other periods:
![]() |
Same Graph, marked up to highlight some interesting features |
The three red horizontals indicate the average level of "RGDP minus CPI" for three periods:
Period | RGDP - CPI | RGDP Avg | Inflation Avg |
1948-1965 | 2.14866 | 4.10800 | 1.95934 |
1983-2000 | 0.45519 | 3.72727 | 3.27207 |
2000-2024 | -0.36669 | 2.20950 | 2.57619 |
From 1948 to 1965, RGDP growth averaged about 4 percent and inflation averaged about 2 percent. So the red horizontal runs near the 2 percent level.
From 1983 to 2000, RGDP growth averaged about half a percentage point higher than the rate of inflation. So the red line runs about half a percentage point above the zero level.
From 2000 to
2024, average RGDP growth was less than the average CPI for the period.
And in these years the red line runs below the zero level.
I have only one thing to say about this: Economists spend a lot of time focusing on inflation and talking about the Great Inflation of 1965-1982. They spend little time talking about the decline of economic growth. That is a huge mistake, and a massive flaw in their thinking.
Hey -- the "Great Inflation" ended forty years ago. Yes, inflation came back a couple years ago, and nobody liked it. But the inflation started dying out again within three months when the Federal Reserve finally got around to raising interest rates. The problem was not that inflation wouldn't go away. The problem was that the Fed did nothing about inflation -- nothing except let it get worse -- from March 2021 to March 2022.
Compared to the long-term slowing of economic growth, inflation is a small problem. Slowing growth is the big problem. Slowing growth means slowing job growth and slowing income growth. Slowing growth makes it more difficult to survive a bout of inflation, if and when it comes.
Slowing income growth means things are not getting better.
-
I'm not a fan of "diagrams" in economics, but sometimes... This is a screen capture of slide 36 from a SlideShare presentatio...
-
It is surely true that the price level cannot rise without a corresponding increase in the quantity of money or velocity or use of credit. ...
-
Mark Thoma links to the Kansas City Fed's Nominal Wage Rigidities and the Future Path of Wage Growth by José Mustre-del-Río and Emily ...
-
JW Mason : "... in retrospect it is clear that we should have been talking about big new public spending programs to boost demand....
-
I've been hearing the phrase "late capitalism" for so long that I'm forced to conclude that the very concept of late cap...