Discussing Macro Economic Events
Random header image... Refresh for more!

China’s GDP News

A few comments on the news today regarding China.

  • What appears common from all news sources is that by 2029/2030, China could eclipse the US as the world’s largest economy. As far as I can tell, this would require China to sustain an 8% growth rate for 20 years, assuming the US will sustain a 3% growth rate over the same period.

Really? I mean - really?

I have no doubt that China could pass the US as the world’s largest economy at some point in the future.  But doing it by sustaining a further 20 years of 8% annual growth? This is the same logic that got us into the housing crisis: assuming linear or consistent growth patterns that appear wildly out of balance with what will probably be a lot more random of a future.

Secondly, what no article did was discuss what this new economy would look like:

  • Assuming the US and China had similar size economies, could China sustain a 6-10% current account surplus annually? This would mean in dollar terms a current account surplus annually of $800 million to $1.4 trillion.
  • Where would this surplus come from? Japan does not run a current account deficit, neither does Europe on a whole. So that would point to the US, a consistent current account deficit country.
  • But the US, while running a current account deficit, has never run a deficit this high. The highest the CA deficit has reached is roughly 6%.
  • Current account deficits this high would point to one thing: A currency devaluation. Not just a gradual adjustment, but probably a shock. But a shock would not be good for China, which pegs its currency to the Dollar and relies on the US as one of its largest trading partners.
  • A massive US devaluation would boost exports doing three things simultaneously - boosting US growth, decreasing its current account deficit, further increasing US growth, and finally, decreasing Chinese growth by increasing its imports.

All three effects would make it further difficult for China to overtake the US, especially assuming consistent growth under current policy regimes. Consistent growth doesn’t assume a shock, as discussed above. See the last two years as a current example. A faster way for China to overtake the US is to not only grow fast, but let its currency appreciate, as what we’re really discussing is GDP in Dollar terms. Letting its currency appreciate may slow down the export machine, but hopefully it will provide greater per capita wealth across the population.

August 16, 2010   Comments Off

Bernanke Growth

Ben Bernanke said the following in South Carolina:

“In particular, in the household sector, growth in real consumer spending seems likely to pick up in coming quarters from its recent modest pace, supported by gains in income and improving credit conditions.”

Let’s put this in perspective:

  • We have roughly 15,000,000 unemployed people in the United States.
  • To return to true level of structural unemployment, we need to create roughly 8-9 million jobs at a minimum.
  • The average full time salary for full time workers is approximately $39,000.
  • Thus, GDP must increase by $39,000 * 9,000,000 = $350 Billion

What could cause this? Based on Bernanke’s comment, one of two conditions could occur:

  • Credit conditions could occur, allowing consumers to borrow against half of current savings ~ $707 billion and spend that entire amount within the United States (no imports).
  • Income could increase by wages and salaries increasing by 6%, even though they have been unchanged since 2007 and real wages have remained flat for the last decade.

Unfortunately, I see it being incredibly difficult for either to occur rapidly without some sort of external boost.

August 4, 2010   Comments Off

Tax Cuts - What are We Missing?

I’m still blown away by Arthur Laffer and others espousing the benefits of tax cuts.  Here is discussing the benefits of the Reagan tax cuts, courtesy of the Wall St Journal:

“In 1981, Ronald Reagan—with bipartisan support—began the first phase in a series of tax cuts passed under the Economic Recovery Tax Act (ERTA), whereby the bulk of the tax cuts didn’t take effect until Jan. 1, 1983. Reagan’s delayed tax cuts were the mirror image of President Barack Obama’s delayed tax rate increases. For 1981 and 1982 people deferred so much economic activity that real GDP was basically flat (i.e., no growth), and the unemployment rate rose to well over 10%.

But at the tax boundary of Jan. 1, 1983 the economy took off like a rocket, with average real growth reaching 7.5% in 1983 and 5.5% in 1984. It has always amazed me how tax cuts don’t work until they take effect. Mr. Obama’s experience with deferred tax rate increases will be the reverse. The economy will collapse in 2011.”

Fair enough, but aren’t we forgetting Paul Volcker and his “War on Inflation”?

Look at fed funds rates during 1981, 1982 and 1983. We go from 19% in 1981 to 8.51% in 1983.

And CPI? We go from 10.3% in 1981 and 6.2% in 1982 to 3.2% in 1983.

So, I mean - C’mon.

But here are my two favorite responses to this:

“MR. GREGORY:  You don’t agree with Republican leaders who say tax cuts pay for themselves?

MR. GREENSPAN:  They do not. ”

So, let’s focus on job creating government policy that will get the economy going, without breaking the bank.

August 3, 2010   Comments Off

Excess Reserves, Taylor Rule, and the Fed

  • Right now, required reserves at the Federal Reserve stand at ~$64 billion
  • Excess reserves stand at slightly over $1 trillion, roughly equal to 7% of average GDP over the 2007-2009

In the Winter of 2008, the Federal Reserve faced a difficult decision:

  • The overnight funds rate on reserves, the base rate the Fed controls, was set at 1%, but the traded rate was 0.14%. So, as predicted, the Fed slashed its rate by 0.75 points and starting paying interest on excess reserves.
  • Today, the Fed pays interest on excess reserves equal to its targeted funds rate 0.25%. However, the effective rate trades between 0.10% and 0.2% according to market data from the FT, pointing to continued slack in the system.

What to do:

  • GDP for 2007 was barely over $14 trillion. In 2009, it was $14.1 trillion. Assuming the US grows at 3% per year, mid-2010 GDP would have been roughly over $15.1 trillion. The difference between potential output and current GDP is the amount of money parked at the Federal Reserve, earning 0.25%.
  • Stopping the payment on excess reserves could be a boost to growth of the economy. Banks will have to find a home for this money. However, faced with the uncertainty of the current economy, and an economy facing deflation, banks may simply continue to keep those reserves parked at the Fed.
  • The only major use of this income in the short term, would be a new round of stimulus. Highly controversial, yet effective according to a new paper by Mark Zandi of Moody’s and Alan Blinder of Princeton. Consumers are saving more, 6.2% of their disposable income, equal to ~$700 billion. This is roughly $450 billion more than during normal times. Fair to say, this money is being parked at the Fed in the form of excess reserves.
  • Suspending interest payments on excess reserves would almost certainly bring the effective rate to zero. Using the Taylor Rule, the difference between 0.1 and 0.0 would add 0.2% increase in GDP given current CPI - not much.
  • Yet, cash earning zero would have to find a home. Maybe then it would be possible to fund a second stimulus. Ideas for this stimulus would be as follows:
  1. Replacing all municipal buses and taxi cabs with clean burning natural gas buses and taxis made in the USA.  This would have a significant impact for both the natural gas industry as well as domestic manufacturing.
  2. Expanding high speed rail for both passenger and freight transport (moving more post and parcel service onto high speed rail). Key links would be Chicago to Detroit and the East Coast as well as continued east coast service from Boston all the way thru Charlotte and Atlanta.
  3. Increasing port capacity for greater exporting ability in Houston, New Orleans, Virginia Beach, Philly, New York and the entire West Coast.
  4. Increasing rail capacity in the Midwest to make manufacturing easier (and cheaper) to move to the coastal parts of the country.

To be sure, the investments outlined above would be 2-5 years in duration, shifting the excess reserves to the right on the yield curve where the current 10 year treasury yield stands at 2.91%. But infrastructure investments are incredibly productive. All of these outlined above would for sure produce more than 2.91% over ten years in returns. It’s a bet worth making and funding worth investing.

August 1, 2010   Comments Off

Martin Wolf, Current Account Deficits and Productivity

Martin Wolf, Economics Editor for the Financial Times, poses many questions on his Wolf Exchange.

I was particularly interested in Mr Wolf’s question on Current Account Deficits. I, like many others, responded to Mr. Wolf’s question. Here is Martin’s response, mentioning me, posted in his Exchange:

Current Account Deficits, I think, is one of the most important topics in economics. Therefore, here is my cleaned up version of his response.

Click on this link to view the response: avoiding-a-financial-shock-with-sustained-current-account-deficits. As I see it, the key is real productivity increases. In the long run, inflation and deflation won’t get you there. Would love to hear your thoughts.

July 7, 2010   Comments Off

On Inflation, Martin Feldstein is Wrong

Martin Feldstein’s column, (June 29, 2009) on inflation opines that while federal stimulus is still necessary, a combination of looming deficits, federal reserve bond purchases, and skittishness of foreign investors are pushing yields on the 10 Year Treasury up to alarming levels.

Feldstein’s major premise is detailed in the second paragraph of his column: Higher Yields have led to higher mortgage rates, reducing home buying, depressing net worth tremendously in the last six months. Further, lower home prices have caused more defaults and “weakened bank balance sheets”.

Lets correct some facts: Between 2006 and Six Months ago (December 2008), house prices dropped 27 percent. From December 2008 to March 2009 - the latest month of data,  housing prices fell comparatively 7%. Further, August 2009 Futures for Case-Shiller Composite index is currently trading at 152.0 slightly above where the index level stood in December of 2008, bookmarking the recent rise in treasury yields.

Feldstein, in his column, notes that the current spread between 10-year TIPS and 10 year Treasuries shows an inflation expectation of 2% annually. That inflation predictions have “jumped” to slightly over 2% per year is hardly alarming. 2% is often seen as an inflation target. That the jump in rates is perpetrated by fears foreign investors may no longer continue to buy US debt is simply not true.

China, most notably, while making loud noises is in a “dollar trap”, argued most notably by Paul Krugman. Fail to purchase US Treasuries, and decline the dollar’s value, making our goods cheaper and China’s goods more expensive, ending China’s competitive advantage in manufacturing.

At a high-level, if manufacturing in China continues to keep durable good costs down, and the Federal Stimulus package will improve roads and cargo lines, reducing transportation costs, price increases outside of energy spikes are hard to imagine for durable goods measured in CPI.

Perhaps Feldstein’s view of investor skittishness and his call for the Fed to assure the markets it will curb future “inflationary lending” are really directed at asset inflation: Perhaps investors believe that while policy makers are acting vigorously, nothing structurally has or is going to change to prevent another asset bubble similar to house price inflation witnessed over this past decade.

Asset inflation, be it houses or equities, is much harder to prevent than inflation in durable goods. Let us hope our fiscal stimulus and monetary policy are giving the economy surer footing to produce more, sharing those productivity gains across a wider spectrum, ensuring a diverse economy in the odds of preventing future asset bubbles.

June 30, 2009   No Comments

The Fed’s Balance Sheet - Deflation Preventing and not Inflation Causing

The Federal Reserve released its combined 2008 Financial Statements on April 20, 2009. 2008 was stunning, with the balance sheet growing from $915 billion to $2.245 trillion. The major increases were in the commercial paper facility, foreign currency swaps, and term asset backed facility. Essentially - stabilizing mechanisms for short term market operations (both foreign and domestic) to continue.

The increase of $1.33 trillion is slightly larger than the gain in US GDP from $13.178 trillion to $14.264 trillion from 2006 to 2008. Essentially, the gains in US GDP from 2006 - when the Case-Shiller Composite Housing Index reached its peak - to 2008 are now sitting on the Fed’s books when they should be out in the private economy, on the balance sheets of companies, creating the next wave of products and services.

There are those who have argued the Fed’s actions will cause tremendous inflation. It is important to remember the major actions of the Fed are all preventing short term credit disruptions, which if not collectively implemented,  would have all lead to price declines, deflation.

Currency Swaps, worth roughly $553 billion or 1% of world GDP, are held against a basket of G-20 currencies, have most likely prevented an increasing demand for dollar. In the fall of 2008, the demand for the dollar reached a recent record high. Further appreciation would have further pressured US producers, unable to compete on price for various goods/services. The only solution would have been to cut costs to reduce prices.

Commercial Paper, worth $333 billion, is necessary to keep working capital afloat. Without it, the only solution to meet existing funding needs or return previously funded commercial paper would have been to liquidate existing inventory at reduced prices.

Term Asset-Backed Facility (TAF), worth roughly $450 billion, is further short term financing to allow banks to continue liquidity while suffering losses on their longest duration assets - CMOs. Without access to short term financing, again the only choice would be asset liquidation, further forcing price declines.

True, CPI did not increase in 2008. But added together, the Commercial Paper and TAF are roughly 5% of US GDP. As most companies were levered to the tilt, if the Federal Reserve funding was not there, the US price and consequentially unemployment situation would have been far worse.

As to worries of runaway inflation, the jury is still out. My belief is that the capital these facilities are replacing - in a sense - is now shoring up the balance sheets of various banks and companies. By increasing  equity ratios at companies and banks, future invested dollars from these newly shored up institutions will need higher returns on capital (all else equal), which is equivalent to the Fed raising fed funds rates to control inflation.

Until a recovery though, it is a good thing our economy has not faced deflation, certainly a real possibility in the fall of 2008.

May 27, 2009   No Comments

Ireland, Currency Controls, and Must Reads

Paul Krugman writes this week about the Irish Economy. In his column and blog, Paul notes Ireland is painfully transitioning, raising taxes to keep its fiscal position in line.

Let’s pause. If you have not read Lords of Finance yet by Liaquat Ahamed, stop reading this blog (or any other) and give the book a go. It is the cornerstone to understanding the current economic/financial crisis and comprehending possible solutions of both short and long duration.

In Lords of Finance, Ahamed writes of an eerily similar situation during the 1920s when Great Britain, starved for credit to funds its fiscal deficits, had to seek tacit approval from the House of Morgan on its proposed budget. Upon approval, Morgan helped raise a consortium of funding to help Great Britain stay afloat.

No doubt the same conversation was probably occurring in Ireland before it made its proposed increase in taxes. In the months since the world Financial Meltdown, Ireland raised debt in November 08 ($4bn),  January (Euro 6bn), and February (Euro 4bn). Then on March 30, 2009 Standard and Poors dropped Ireland’s sovereign credit rating from AAA to AA+ with a negative outlook. Since then, Ireland has not tapped the capital markets and has now tightened its fiscal belt.

This is now the choice of Ireland and other European Countries with current account deficits.  There is an immediate need to shore up the balance sheet, repay existing debts, and wait until domestic prices decline to a point where goods and services are competitive enough to be readily exported, regrowing the economy.  But waiting for prices to decline is a very painful phenomenon. Prices only decline when demand drops and a drop in demand across the board is synonymous with higher unemployment.

Ireland may be a small country (GDP wise), but its decisions are no different than California’s or many other states and municipalities here in the US. Without complete currency control, acting prudently (although potentially not economically), is the only choice to continue to tap existing capital markets, paying teachers, fire fighters and policemen. Economies in trouble and with a net debt position and complete currency control would either see a currency devaluation (in the form of a crash) or would choose to devalue their currency. Currency devaluation would hopefully occur faster than responsive domestic inflation allowing goods to be exported at a more competitive basis. Yet without currency controls, deflation is the only mechanism to getting prices to a point where exports can repay existing net debts (assuming those debts are denominated in the domestic currency).

Ireland is being used as an example of when economies are too reliant on the financial sector. To be clear, robust capital markets are critical to any functioning economy. Yet it is also important to note the following function: The limits to the magnitude (1x, 2x, 3x) of a sale of any business are equivalent to its estimated Rate of Return on Assets divided by its weighted average cost of capital - In a simpler Mogdliani Miller world this is the rate of asset return divided by the sum of the funding spread above the risk free rate and the risk free rate of return. In other words, the numerator to any business sale is the Rate of Return on Assets and the denominator is the return a new buyer is willing to accept. In the last eight years, we’ve grown because of the denominator: capital became cheap and offered increasingly attractive multiples for business transactions. In the next eight years, we must focus on the upper bound, the return on assets, the productivity of the country and its ability to make goods and services, representative of its currency.

April 22, 2009   1 Comment

On Shiller, Akerlof, and Inflation Targeting

The Fed mulls an inflation target, to stabilize the economy. Robert Shiller and George Akerlof, in their new book Animal Spirits, argue for a “credit target”, a level of lending to keep the economy near full employment. In the middle is an old question - Should Central Banks consider Asset Bubbles a form of inflation?

Look at the 2008 Commodities Bubble:

  • January 2nd, 2008 - According to the Financial Times, One month Oil Futures on the NYMEX were $99.62
  • July 2nd, One month Oil Futures were $144.26
  • December 30, One month Oil Futures were $39.03

That the Fed insists on Core Inflation, excluding energy, made it miss how energy moves all consumers prices. Consumers pulled back on gasoline purchases in the short term and in the long term, terminated SUV purchases, crippling GM and Chrysler.

Yet during oil’s rise, the Fed had to reduce the Fed Funds rate as the effects of Bear Stearns was first on its mind. It’s not clear the Fed could have raised rates to prevent oil’s rise, without crippling the economy.

Preventing the Housing Bubble though could have eliminated what we currently witness: Global de-leveraging and massive reassessment of household wealth. The sheer amount of leverage also helped fuel stock market booms (of which some was real) giving consumer confidence in 401k statements. Add to this the house market boom, household behavior such as reverse mortgages, credit card spending, an overall negative savings rates would probably not have occurred.

Yet the Fed’s role in determining over-investment is tricky, politically controversial. Without world-wide coordination for world wide bubbles, false arbitrage opportunities such as the Carry Trade can wreak havoc on international trade/commerce.

What Shiller, Akerlof, and all concerned about asset bubbles really want is an economy where the Financial Sector does not a) contribute the most to GDP growth and b) rise too disproportionately in terms of total GDP. This was our economy prior to this crisis. The economy must have real growth, not growth due to paper assets. Once perception is pricked on over priced assets, no one knows an assets true worth, causing trust and lending stop.

If Central Banks can not politically prevent asset bubbles, then our government must improve its risk management program. Two logical improvements are as follows:

  1. Regulation and oversight must increase. Madoff’s false profits now cause hospital wings  to go without funding. Mortgage Originators are forcing real family pain on false interest rate promises.  And we all witness a loss in market confidence.
  2. Running government surpluses in healthy economic times. 90 years ago, John Maynard Keynes worried about this very issue we now face. Certainly, government surpluses up until now would reduce our worry over how much debt we must now raise.

Only a start, but planning for the future must occur to prevent a future colapse of this proportion.

February 23, 2009   No Comments

Why the Long Term Solution is More than the Bad Bank

Yesterday’s news was not encouraging. Home value declines will continue to make families and home owners second guess their net worth. In a recession, this prompts only one reaction: saving.

The macro economic accounting identity states savings equals investment. This static steady theory is becoming a large force against fiscal stimulus, now awaiting Senate Approval.

Let’s review the facts. With the Fed meeting today, Fed Funds ended trading at 0.18% according to the Financial Times. As rates are not able to go below zero,  interest rates are essentially fixed. And bank reserves held at the Fed increase. There thus is no further mechanism to force private investment to equal savings.

As savings not offset by investment (which would lead to new jobs) and unemployment increase, taxes decline. If government expenditures just stayed the same, our federal deficit would have to increase, even without fiscal stimulus.

Faced with the choice of

  • Large Federal Deficit
  • Infrastructure Investments => New Jobs and a Large Federal Deficit

Its best to choose jobs, new infrastructure and a large federal deficit.

Today’s news was even less encouraging. That jobs are lost in record numbers makes valuing mortgage bonds, even if simply constructed, even harder. Yet mortgage bonds are not simply constructed, they are incredibly complex.

Job losses will not decelerate for a while. It will take time for fiscal stimulus to take effect. This makes the idea of the “bad bank” incredibly complex. Many like Reich still hold out hope for a solution that protects the tax payer. The economic reality makes it impossible that mortgage assets still on the books are worth anything close to what they were previously valued. To unclog lending, we -the taxpayer- must further take it on the chin.

Yet as the fiscal stimulus and bad bank solutions work through the economy (and slowly), we must ask ourselves: what kind of economy do we want to now create? Should the Financial Sector contribute 31% of GDP as it did in 2006?

Which should we value more? Financial engineering or mechanical engineering?

This is again why infrastructure investment as the stimulus for tomorrow’s economy is so important: The only way long term balance will be restored (and one could measure this by the current account balance) is to choose engineering over financial engineering. The more we build (not out of paper) at home, the more our economy will grow in a balanced, mature way for generations.

January 29, 2009   No Comments