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Yes, that's my problem. It's mainly supply side.View attachment 136538
View attachment 136539
Take and apply for all kinds of stuff and then you'll understand why we're seeing so much inflation. It's all supply side.
Capitalism doesn't work without inflation, a business can't operate over the long term, if its income doesn't increase and its input costs keep rising IMO.unless the market ( and possibly bond market ) have a 'taper tantrum ' ( and ruin the Democrat chances of a mid-term victory ) they ideally need a rate above 2% ( whether that is 4% , 6% or more ,time will tell )
but the government needs to inflate all that easy money away , because no way US tax-payers will tolerate the tax hikes necessary
AND the RINO Republicans probably only have war as an answer as well
but i guess time will tell world war or civil war ??
Yes, that's my problem. It's mainly supply side.
And any rate hikes in the present fragile environment will bring a recession. So many businesses are in debt due to Covid. Home buyers also. A small rise is likely to send the economy over the cliff.
The inflation feels transitionary to me.
Yes, that's my problem. It's mainly supply side.
And any rate hikes in the present fragile environment will bring a recession. So many businesses are in debt due to Covid. Home buyers also. A small rise is likely to send the economy over the cliff.
The inflation feels transitionary to me.
Hence me saying stagflation is comingAgreed. Supply side problems as employees have died or production shut down due to restrictions/lockdowns.
Now we're adding higher costs of debt to the mix? That will only exacerbate the problem....
If the issue is supply side, then what credible solutions do they have?
It's possible. Do we have the right components though?Hence me saying stagflation is coming
Demographics, debt.P
It's possible. Do we have the right components though?
Unemployment is low, growth is up. Sure, that may reverse if interest rates increase but that would be a reason for reserve banks not to increase them.
Demographics is inevitable and being addressed via automation (if you're referring to its impact on production).Demographics, debt.
Capitalism doesn't work without inflation, a business can't operate over the long term, if its income doesn't increase and its input costs keep rising IMO.
What I was meaning by the statement was, a lot of the inputs into a business can't be controlled they are regulatory or influenced by outside forces e.g rates, rents, electricity, insurance, shipping costs, port handling charges, increased price of the product from the source.automation brings it's own issues ,(try to explain to your lender or lessor ) that you want to cut back on the machines/payments during the tough cycles , ( sadly it is MUCH easier to lose jobs )
i disagree capitalism ( although they call it entrepreneurial spirit ) works fine in such times , productively is increased , costs lowered , new markets and strategies found , it sorts the ambitious and intelligent , from the rest
Agree with the rest but it could be argued that the existence of central banks with their tendency to debase the currency is not something that naturally occurs in a capitalist system.So really unless you can stop the price of statutory costs, energy costs, insurance costs etc rising, inflation is a naturally occurring event in the capitalist system.
That's true but we don't live in a true capitalist system, we actually have a hybrid system which works extremely well and why we in Australia enjoy such an affluent lifestyle.Agree with the rest but it could be argued that the existence of central banks with their tendency to debase the currency is not something that naturally occurs in a capitalist system.
As a case in point, in a true free market interest rates would go wherever the market sends them. They'd never be "announced" and certainly not by someone appointed by government.
yes many of those cost rises are indexed ( plus the GST shell game )What I was meaning by the statement was, a lot of the inputs into a business can't be controlled they are regulatory or influenced by outside forces e.g rates, rents, electricity, insurance, shipping costs, port handling charges, increased price of the product from the source.
I would assume those costs continually rise ( I know my rates, rego's, insurance etc have), a point must be reached where those costs erode a businesses margins to the point they either have to pass on those costs or go broke.
If a business buys in a product to sell and can't sell it for enough profit to cover their outgoings they will go broke eventually, so in reality the price of that product must go up as a function of increased costs, or the system fails.
Well that's my working out, the capitalist system we in Australia work in, whereby the private sector provide the countries trade and industries and the Govt provides services, unless the private sector can make money the system fails.
Which is why the Govt had to pour so much money into jobkeeper, otherwise there wouldn't be any goods available, when shoppers came out to shop, because the businesses wouldn't have been able to pay their suppliers and it would have imploded.
So really unless you can stop the price of statutory costs, energy costs, insurance costs etc rising, inflation is a naturally occurring event in the capitalist system.
I we had a socialist system, where the Govt owned everything, that's different. The Govt can just regulate the prices and take the loss into consolidated revenue, but that ends up with a dilemma when the taxes have to be so high to cover the loses, there is no point in striving to get ahead because you taxes become too onerous.
Just my thoughts.
So the markets response was to drop everything and run to the USD.(Kitco News) Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Poll described the current inflation situation as "slightly worse" than in December, stating that there is …. Without hurting the labor market.
"There's quite a bit of room to raise interests without threatening the labor market. This is by so many measures a historically tight labor market — record levels of job openings, quits, wages are moving up at the highest pace they have in decades," Powell told reporters.
All eyes were on the Fed chair Wednesday afternoon after the U.S. central bank held rates steady but singled a rate hike in March.
Powell clarified the Fed's thinking around the March rate hike, stating: "The committee is of the mind to raise the federal funds rate at the March meeting."
In response to Powell's message, gold plunged more than $35, with February Comex gold futures last trading at $1,815.70, down 2% on the day. The U.S. stock market also reversed gains following Powell's press conference, with the Dow falling 0.9%, the S&P 500 down 0.8%, and the Nasdaq dropping 0.6%.
last night the Fed fessed up and admitted that inflation is " slightly worse " than expected, though still transitory.
So now they expect a rate rise in March.
From Kitco News
So the markets response was to drop everything and run to the USD.
A fiat currency that has been severely devalued by QE and inflation.
Makes so much sense.
Mick
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