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the logical outcome?

#21 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2012-August-10, 13:52

View Postphil_20686, on 2012-August-10, 04:48, said:

Americans often seem to think of themselves as the saviours of Europe in WW2.

don't you? what would have happened had we not entered the war (which was a very real possibility)... there was a whole lot of "leave europe to the europeans" sentiment, until it became clear that continental europe couldn't handle hitler alone... also, don't forget your own part in this - chamberlon ring a bell?

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No D-Day, europe would have been lost to tyranny for generations [without american intervention]. And for this, you think you are the good guys?

fify... you're welcome
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#22 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2012-August-10, 14:34

View Postluke warm, on 2012-August-10, 13:42, said:

how are you defining "properous?" are the headlines we've been reading wrong? it looks to me like several "prosperous" european countries are on the verge of bankruptcy, and there's even talk of some going back to their own currancy (and completely out of the euro zone)

that could be the cost of prosperity... free stuff is rarely, if ever, free

The one that's likely to be first out of the Euro rarely collects any meaningful tax off its richest citizens so it's unlikely to be an economy that works. Apparently the Greek revenue resorted to helicopters to see how many people reportedly earning a pittance had swimming pools, so astroturf sales soared as they covered them up. Also as a) the Greeks wanted to be in the Euro and b) the French and Germans wanted them in it, the Greeks lied through their teeth about meeting the entry conditions and the ECB let them do it.

Given this, it's no surprise that in an economic slump, Greece suffers even worse than the rest.

If Spain and Italy fail, it's much more of a problem but less likely. Part of Spain's problem is an artificial property bubble caused by a lot of dodgy Deutchmarks that needed to be laundered before they were made obsolete by the Euro. Additionally Spanish properties had an "escritura" value (a minimum value for which the property could be assumed to be sold), so many properties were sold for this amount (for tax purposes) with the balance paid in Switzerland so Spain missed out on the tax revenue.

Also where we had our place, local politics was so corrupt that things like the mayor's brother building a petrol station on "green belt" land without planning permission were routine and the expats got so upset with this they formed their own political party with some success.
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#23 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2012-August-10, 15:43

View PostCyberyeti, on 2012-August-10, 14:34, said:

The one that's likely to be first out of the Euro ...

do you think Ireland is in danger? How about the rest of the UK? I still maintain that Obama wants for the U.S. what Europe has. He recently (yesterday) said:

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I believe in American workers, I believe in this American industry, and now the American auto industry has come roaring back. Now I want to do the same thing with manufacturing jobs, not just in the auto industry, but in every industry.

Can you believe that statement? GM is "roaring back?" And the stimulus for the auto industry wasn't enough, now he wants to "stimulate" EVERY industry? What a buffoon.
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#24 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2012-August-10, 16:51

View Postluke warm, on 2012-August-10, 15:43, said:

do you think Ireland is in danger? How about the rest of the UK?

Ireland (the south) is in danger, but I think less than Greece. The rest of the UK is not in the Euro so has a different set of problems. Our government is not putting a stimulus in which is the opposite of the way the French are tackling this. Basically our problem is something like:

Under the Conservatives - owe 160 BN and increasing for a bit till the situation improves - pay 1.87% interest on it - the markets trust the strategy.
Under Labour use a stimulus, - owe 180 BN which will increase for a shorter time then come down faster as extra tax comes in if it works - pay 6% on it as the markets would have no confidence due to the mess the previous Labour administration made of it.

Unfortunately the LibDems seem to be intent on ensuring Labour rule in perpetuity after a hissy fit when Conservative back benchers ensured their House of Lords reform bill would have got voted out, so they now won't support the bill to reverse all the gerrymandering Labour did in their years of power. If the Conservative/Labour total votes were reversed, Labour would have had a 3 figure overall majority, the Conservatives got a hung parliament, basically Labour created an election they couldn't lose, then did, but won't next time on the same rules.
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#25 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2012-August-10, 21:07

France was number one so it seems:

1) great weather
2) 8+ wk of vacation
3) add in holidays
4) 2-3 hour lunches
5) great old art
6) having a mistress is a must
7) stay out of suburbs of PARis...the police do.


I call this a museum country ...a great great place to visit. but that is just me.

compare this to USA

1) work alot
2) work more
3)lots of crime
4) repeat
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#26 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 04:31

View PostCyberyeti, on 2012-August-10, 16:51, said:

Ireland (the south) is in danger, but I think less than Greece. The rest of the UK is not in the Euro so has a different set of problems. Our government is not putting a stimulus in which is the opposite of the way the French are tackling this. Basically our problem is something like:

Under the Conservatives - owe 160 BN and increasing for a bit till the situation improves - pay 1.87% interest on it - the markets trust the strategy.
Under Labour use a stimulus, - owe 180 BN which will increase for a shorter time then come down faster as extra tax comes in if it works - pay 6% on it as the markets would have no confidence due to the mess the previous Labour administration made of it.


AHHHHH!.

Our interest rates are low because we borrow in our own currency and because there is a shortage of safe assets in the shadow banking system. If you think that low interest rates in teh UK reflect predictions for the economy, then God Help Us All. Since you can effectively buy a share of GDP growth by buying the FTSE all share, that means that we are expecting thirty year GDP growth rates of under two percent. Low interest rates are an indictment of central bank policy. Except their not, as the shadow banking is forced to buy them to grease repo transactions, and raise liquidity from teh ECB, so really the rates don't tell us anything. Germany is selling its bonds at zero coupon. Switzerland recently offered a two year bond with a negative coupon rate, and it had three times bid to cover. People are literally paying the swiss treasury for the privilege of holding their currency.

So, interest rates are low because either:
(1) The central banks have mot yet countered the monetary contraction caused by the collapse of the AAA rated securities market.
Or
(2) Because investors believed that the long term future of GDP is negative.

NEITHER OF THESE THINGS ARE POSITIVES.

Regarding Ireland. This is a structural problem. Every country in the eurozone periphery will follow spain. What happens is this, germany's productivity growth is higher than country A by x%. This means that the wage growth in germany and country A should be different by x%. However the bundesbank is allergic to inflation, and has demanded a one percent inflation target. Since inflation == rising wages, the most that wages can rise in Germany is one percent. Thus any country whose productivity growth is 1% or more lower than germany's is forced to cut their wages. But wages are downwardly rigid, so instead they become uncompetitive and have to lay of workers.

It is impossible for the eurozone to function unless the differences in productivity growth between the best and worst countries are less than the rate of inflation. Greece, then spain, then italy, then Ireland then france. Its a destructive cycle that will not end unless the ECB raises its inflation target above 3% long term, and to 5% in the short term, to help make up for past adjustments. Germany knows that if inflation rises, it will not rise symmetrical, instead German wages will rise while the periphery stay stationary. This will ruin their profitable export business, and force them to balance consumption and production. So it opposes it.

The fiscal policy of the eurozone goverments is irrelevant. If you want proof, look at the markets. They are the best way to process information. Everytime it looks like one of the world banks will engage in expansionary monetary policy, the stock markets soars, the implicit price of default drops, everything moves in the right direction. The markets know that a monetary solution is needed here. Every time the ECB talks about the need for price stability, and to stay the course, the markets collapse. These are predictions of the effects of ECB policy.
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#27 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 07:51

View Postphil_20686, on 2012-August-11, 04:31, said:

The markets know that a monetary solution is needed here. Every time the ECB talks about the need for price stability, and to stay the course, the markets collapse. These are predictions of the effects of ECB policy.

if i understand your last few posts on this, you seem to be saying that the u.s.'s (for example) problems can all be solved by simply printing more money, lots more... there will either be inflation, in effect wiping out the debt, or not... if not (which seems impossible), the dollar stays high or goes higher, and there are more of them... unemployment would of necessity then drop

is that even close?
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#28 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 09:42

View Postluke warm, on 2012-August-11, 07:51, said:

if i understand your last few posts on this, you seem to be saying that the u.s.'s (for example) problems can all be solved by simply printing more money, lots more... there will either be inflation, in effect wiping out the debt, or not... if not (which seems impossible), the dollar stays high or goes higher, and there are more of them... unemployment would of necessity then drop

is that even close?



The point of rising inflation, is that it will lower unemployment. In a demand side recession, there is nothing `wrong' with the economy, but for some reason prices have gone wrong, so we can no longer exchange the stuff we are producing for the stuff that we want. In theory we should simply be able to reset the prices. In reality wages and prices are downwards sticky. It is not easy to convince people to take a pay cut. Inflation makes it easier to give people effective pay cuts, as holding wages steady is a pay cut. So in a demand side recession there is a direct trade off between the rate of inflation and the unemployment rate. This is called the Philip's curve (google it).

Lowering unemployment should be the first goal in a recession, as putting people back to work will raise national output, and is generally a good thing. Also, it is difficult for inflation to rise much when the output is increasing, as the money supply has to rise faster than the output in order to cause inflation. What happens in reality, is that the central bank attempts to cause inflation by printing money, this puts people back to work, and the rate of inflation starts to rise only after unemployment is close to its natural rate, at which point the trade off becomes less. When you are at the natural rate, no amount of inflation will achieve a reduction in unemployment.

It appears, that central bankers believe that `price stability' is a more important goal that reducing unemployment. This is bananas.

However, there is a second argument sometimes advanced by left wing commentators, e.g. Krugman, that we need fiscal policy (i.e. government spending) in order to reduce unemployment. The believe that monetary policy is ineffective when interest rates are zero, since the traditional way for a central bank to expand the money supply is by buying treasuries, but zero coupon treasuries are identical to hard cash, so this becomes less effective at low interest rates. This is called, variously, the zero bound, the liquidity trap, ZIRP, and other things, but basically the thrust of their argument is that the central bank cannot, under these circumstances, cause inflation. This is also bananas. For one thing, if it is true, the central bank could buy up every US treasury and give them back to the US government, and say "look, don't bother paying us back, theres no need, we can print this money for free anyhow". Krugman seems to believe that doing this would not cause any inflation, and would therefore not achieve anything. If this were the case, the central bank could buy up every piece of personal, private or government bond or debt with newly minted cash, and retire them, for free. So it should clearly do that.

On the other hand, if like me, you believe that the central bank can cause inflation even at the lower bound, then we are back to reducing unemployment. They should clearly engage in monetary stimulus to lower unemployment back to the natural rate (5-6% for the US). Central banks are choosing high unemployment and recession.

My understanding is that they misunderstand the distinction between supply side and demand side problems, and therefore do not believe that raising inflation would lower unemployment. This is what happened in the 1970's. in that case they tried to lower unemployment by raising inflation, but that did not work,because supply side problems are `real' problems, and cannot be fixed or alleviated by fiddling with monetary policy. Supply side problems are easy to understand in principle: Suppose that an asteroid destroyed half of the united states, and half of its productive capacity (eg factories) but you managed to save all of the people by evacuating them. In this case it is clearly absurd to believe that causing inflation will lead to rapid return of unemployment to 5%. In truth we would need to rebuild all of the factories, farms, cities, etc. This is what happened in the 1970's, except there was a rapidly expanding population (faster than you could build factories), coupled with a restricted supply of commodities, (which caused their prices, especially oil, to rise).

The pessimistic reading is that they do understand perfectly well, they just would rather protect the rich than lower unemployment. I never assume malice where stupidity is sufficient, but there we go.
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#29 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 12:40

Printing more money certainly worked well for the Weimar Republic.
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#30 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 17:27

View Postphil_20686, on 2012-August-11, 09:42, said:

My understanding is that they misunderstand the distinction between supply side and demand side problems, and therefore do not believe that raising inflation would lower unemployment. This is what happened in the 1970's. in that case they tried to lower unemployment by raising inflation, but that did not work,because supply side problems are `real' problems, and cannot be fixed or alleviated by fiddling with monetary policy. Supply side problems are easy to understand in principle: Suppose that an asteroid destroyed half of the united states, and half of its productive capacity (eg factories) but you managed to save all of the people by evacuating them. In this case it is clearly absurd to believe that causing inflation will lead to rapid return of unemployment to 5%. In truth we would need to rebuild all of the factories, farms, cities, etc. This is what happened in the 1970's, except there was a rapidly expanding population (faster than you could build factories), coupled with a restricted supply of commodities, (which caused their prices, especially oil, to rise).

then, because this is a demand vs. supply issue, what i wrote is an accurate reflection of what you are saying?

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-August-11, 12:40, said:

Printing more money certainly worked well for the Weimar Republic.

that's what i was thinking
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#31 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 17:53

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-August-11, 12:40, said:

Printing more money certainly worked well for the Weimar Republic.

Is it your view that the Weimar Republic had a demand-side problem? Otherwise your observation here seems misdirected.
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#32 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2012-August-11, 21:18

View Postmycroft, on 2012-August-10, 12:11, said:

Note 4: Oddly enough, there are many tax benefits/loopholes/dodges that can only be effectively used if you have a lot of money to spare. I can't imagine why, given that one of the things that gets a massive tax benefit is political contributions. If you can afford a good tax accountant, you can probably afford to play the games that get you these tax benefits that "everybody" has access to (but only people in your income range can actually use). This is a spin-off effect of Notes 2 and 3, of course.

I always get a laugh when I hear about the big companies with an "army of tax lawyers" finding tax loopholes for them. How much does it cost to employ an army of lawyers, so what's the net savings when you include all their salaries, benefits, and overhead costs?

On the other hand, maybe I'd rather see that money going to hiring than the government.

#33 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2012-August-12, 07:40

View Postbarmar, on 2012-August-11, 21:18, said:

I always get a laugh when I hear about the big companies with an "army of tax lawyers" finding tax loopholes for them. How much does it cost to employ an army of lawyers, so what's the net savings when you include all their salaries, benefits, and overhead costs?

On the other hand, maybe I'd rather see that money going to hiring than the government.

Political contributions are not deductible and get no tax benefits. Now, if you want to say that political contributions lead to other benefits....
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#34 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-August-12, 08:40

It's my view that radically increasing the money supply is likely to cause more problems than it fixes.
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Posted 2012-August-12, 08:50

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-August-12, 08:40, said:

It's my view that radically increasing the money supply is likely to cause more problems than it fixes.

Okay. I had thought you were addressing Phil's argument.
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#36 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-August-13, 03:30

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-August-12, 08:40, said:

It's my view that radically increasing the money supply is likely to cause more problems than it fixes.


If this turns out to be the case, the central bank can always decrease the money supply again.

Anyway, this is a non argument. The fed controls the money supply. It must choose a path for it, the question is only which monetary indicator should it target. The main purpose of targeting inflation, its primary virtue, is that it makes saving fairly attractive, by preserving the value of past claims on future consumption. A perfectly reasonably thing to do when the economy is doing well. When its doing badly, your first job is to return it to doing well. If your economy is making less stuff, everyone is a loser.

Besides, linking the money supply with inflation is an error anyway. What matters is how much money gets spent. I.e. NGDP. Those central banks that have implicit NGDP targets seldom have to take any action to achieve them, as their is a profit motive in front running their action, so what happens is if it looks like NGDP will overshoot/undershoot, the markets self adjust. Of course, in severe cases like the financial crises, the central banks need to step in, but the better run central banks have mostly reduced their balance sheets to pre-crises level.
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#37 User is offline   squealydan 

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Posted 2012-August-13, 04:58

View Postbarmar, on 2012-August-11, 21:18, said:

I always get a laugh when I hear about the big companies with an "army of tax lawyers" finding tax loopholes for them. How much does it cost to employ an army of lawyers, so what's the net savings when you include all their salaries, benefits, and overhead costs?

On the other hand, maybe I'd rather see that money going to hiring than the government.


I bing-ed "tax lawyer salary" and on the first page I got :

"Tax lawyers are usually between the highest paid lawyers in legal professions. " quote from thelawyersalary.blogspot.co.nz

"Tax attorneys are generally among the highest-paid lawyers in the legal profession." quote from eHow.com

"The median expected salary for a typical Tax Attorney IV in the United States is $169,441. This basic market pricing report was prepared using our Certified Compensation Professionals' analysis of survey data collected from thousands of HR departments at employers of all sizes, industries and geographies." quote from salary.com

From the same site :
"Job Description for Tax Attorney IV
Acts as organization's representation in dealing with local, state, and federal taxing agencies. Responsible for developing tax saving plans and preparing legal documents involving liabilities."

If they aren't saving their employers vast amounts of money in reduced or deferred tax payments, why are tax attorneys are the highest paid lawyers in the legal profession, and why do corporations tend to employ large numbers of them?

From thinkprogress.org : "U.S. corporate taxes that were actually paid (the effective rate) fell to a 40 year low of 12.1 percent in fiscal year 2011, despite corporate profits rebounding to their pre-Great Recession heights."
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#38 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2012-August-13, 05:06

View Postphil_20686, on 2012-August-11, 09:42, said:

This is called the Philip's curve.

I like your appropriation of the "Philip's" curve - for those who haven't come across it before, it is not named after Phil, but after an engineer/economist called Bill Phillips.

I think, though, that you might want to think a bit more about the "inflation-augmented" Phillips curve. If I understand it correctly, you are arguing that the central bank should allow (or create) more inflation, to solve a shortage of demand. The problem that has been noted in the past, however, is that it is only really unexpected inflation that stimulates demand. Once people come to expect a certain rate of inflation, you have to create more inflation above that rate to get any impact, and then people come to expect a higher rate of inflation ratcheting the effect up further, and so on...

This is the fundamental reason for inflation targeting, and I think it is only because this has been fairly successful in anchoring inflation expectations that it appears possible to exploit those expectations to generate unexpected inflation. Once you destroy the credibility of low inflation expectations then the whole round of higher expectations generating higher inflation in a never-ending spiral starts again.

So to support the policy you are advocating you need to be confident that the benefits of a short-term demand stimulus are so high in current circumstances that it is worth throwing away the inflation anchor that has been achieved by credible inflation targeting.
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#39 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-August-13, 10:16

View PostWellSpyder, on 2012-August-13, 05:06, said:

I like your appropriation of the "Philip's" curve - for those who haven't come across it before, it is not named after Phil, but after an engineer/economist called Bill Phillips.

I think, though, that you might want to think a bit more about the "inflation-augmented" Phillips curve. If I understand it correctly, you are arguing that the central bank should allow (or create) more inflation, to solve a shortage of demand. The problem that has been noted in the past, however, is that it is only really unexpected inflation that stimulates demand. Once people come to expect a certain rate of inflation, you have to create more inflation above that rate to get any impact, and then people come to expect a higher rate of inflation ratcheting the effect up further, and so on...


Its not so much "unexpected" as "changing the inflation rate". In the long run money is neutral, and employment will settle into its natural rate regardless of the rate of inflation, provided that it is stable, (and that its not so high as to be distorionary). It should be underlined that the philips curve in all its forms is just an empirical relationship. Its not quantitatively founded, and it is different at different times and situations. Theory strongly suggests that in demand side recessions the Philips curve is steep, whereas in supply side recessions its quite shallow (so in demand side recessions raising inflation works better than in supply side recessions). Qualitatively this reasons are pretty clear I think. A central bank generates inflation by printing money and then buying stuff. In a demand side recession that leads to the putting to work of idle resources. In a supply side recession it is (by definition) impossible/very hard for the economy to produce extra stuff, so when you purchase stuff you are increasing demand but not supply, and so prices rise. This is the root of stagflation: that the economy cannot produce more stuff regardless of how much stimulus is provided.



View PostWellSpyder, on 2012-August-13, 05:06, said:

So to support the policy you are advocating you need to be confident that the benefits of a short-term demand stimulus are so high in current circumstances that it is worth throwing away the inflation anchor that has been achieved by credible inflation targeting.



Your argument is basically an argument in favour of counter cyclical inflation targeting. I think most people broadly agree that its right to let inflation run high during high unemployment, and reign it in when the economy is booming (to prevent it from overheating). Somce central bank mandates (like australia) are explicit: They target two percent average inflation over the cycle, not on a month to month basis. Nominal GDP targeting does the same. Since NGDP = real GDP + inflation, then during recession inflation rises. To de anchor inflation expectations, the markets/people have to believe that the bank will continue to increase the rate of inflation when it is having no effect, or that the central bank will never lower it again.

So in short, I do not believe that temporary rises in the rate of inflation, to moderate totals, will act to de-anchor inflation exectations, provided the central bank is transparent about its policy goals. Afterall, several countries, most notably australia and canada, seem to have explicit NGDP targets, and it has not de-anchored inflation expectations.

View PostWellSpyder, on 2012-August-13, 05:06, said:

This is the fundamental reason for inflation targeting, and I think it is only because this has been fairly successful in anchoring inflation expectations that it appears possible to exploit those expectations to generate unexpected inflation. Once you destroy the credibility of low inflation expectations then the whole round of higher expectations generating higher inflation in a never-ending spiral starts again.

This is not correct. The fundamental reason that monetary policy works at all, is that prices/wages are sticky. This means that changing the rate of inflation gives you a short term boost until wages adjust. In the long run money is neutral. The existance of a neverending spiral basically implies that you do not think that raising the inflation rate will lower unemployment. If it does successfully lower unemployment, then you can lower the rate of inflation again. What happened in the 1970's, is that due to supply side problems, the philips curve had a different shape, and so raising inflation did not have the expected effect on unemployment. Because they failed to appreciate that it was supply side problems, they ended up raising the inflation rate extremely high, because they were worried that lowering it would lead to high unemployment. It was Volker who realised that the philips curve would be shallow, and so he lowered the inflation rate by raising interest rates (contracting the money supply) and this had only a very moderate effect on the unemployment rates, which only confirmed that the philips curve was shallow.

Moreover, I really think this should not concern us at all: recall the central bank will be expanding its balance sheet by buying assets in order to expand the money supply, so it can always contract it at will by selling those assets again. Finally, I leave you with the thought, that those countries who allowed inflation to run high through the financial crisis, managed to avoid high unemployment without de-anchoring their inflation expectations. Even iceland who let inflation peak near to 15%, has had no trouble bringing it back down:

Posted Image

Does that look like a wage spiral to you?<br class="Apple-interchange-newline">




The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper
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Posted 2012-August-13, 10:44

View PostArtK78, on 2012-August-12, 07:40, said:

Political contributions are not deductible and get no tax benefits. Now, if you want to say that political contributions lead to other benefits...
Well, colour me foreign-blind. My apologies.

You see, up where I live, political contributions *do* give a massive tax benefit; it's capped at a reasonable level, but you get $650 back on at least $1275 of donations federally ($300 of the first $400, going down from there). Every Province Is Different, but mine gives you $1000 back on $2300+ of donations.

But in my favour, I note that with sufficient lawyerly assistance, 501©(3) tax-exempt charities can be set up that look from the outside like political lobbying and advertising agencies, and do rather effective "charity". It's possible, because they exist.

And yes, I *will* argue that it leads to other benefits, straight up :-)

But that point, straight up and at least in the US, I am wrong on. Sorry.
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