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Los Angeles, California, United States
The blog 'Breaking Bread' is for a civil general discussion, like you might have at the dinner table with guests. The posts 'Economics Without the B.S.' are intended for a general audience that wouldn't have to know the difference between a Phillips Curve, a Laffer Curve, or a Cole Hamels Curve. Vic Volpe was formally educated at Penn State and the University of Scranton, with major studies in History, Economics and Finance, and Business; and, is self-educated since by way of books and on-line university courses. His practical education came from fifty years of work experience in the blue-collar trades as well as a white-collar professional career -- a white-collar professional career in production and R&D. In his professional career and as a long-haul trucker, he has traveled throughout the lower forty-eight. From his professional career alone he has visited many manufacturing plants in the United States, Europe and China. He has lived in major metropolitan areas and very small towns in various parts of the United States. He served three years with the U.S. Army as an enlisted man, much of that time in Germany.

Sunday, August 16, 2020

What's wrong with this picture?

 What's wrong with this picture?

Economics Without The B.S.**: 

[**  Double entendre intended.]



Notice a problem? What does it take to keep our economy going?


[The Monetary Base is not our Money Supply, it is the money kept among the Federal Reserve Central Bank and its member banks. It also includes money in circulation.]

  






[My answer] Short-term financing of long-term projects -- our capital markets, which are used to provide funding of capital projects, relies on international markets that are dominated by wealth funds/private equity/hedge funds/shadow banking since the 1990s that can easily transfer their funding.  This is a source of instability for projects that need constant funding of long-term projects; it means their operational costs are not fixed for the long-term but quite variable.

So the Fed steps in as a moderating force/counter-weight to keep markets "calm", stability.  A policy of economic stability that keeps interest rates low and one of moderation that keeps an economy "humming" at an optimum level that is below peak performance.

Peak performance:  The best performing economy we had was from the mid-1950s to around 1974, with the peak performance at 1965/1966 -- in addition to high rates of economic growth we also had the least income inequality, it was a period where our productivity gains were broadly shared in society and among the various business sectors.
 
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=uhJ8




The problem is the Fed role has become that of a market-maker/market-participant and not just a market-regulator, an expansion of its role as the lender of last resort, now a buyer (of international assets, like mortgage pools/CDOs, etc.) of last resort.

[Problem?] If democratic societies need a vibrant political climate to accommodate change, does an economic policy of stability impede political progress?  And if the United States is the world leader in advancing democratic values, does this economic policy get in the way of that effort?


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