Inflation in the future?
[** Double entendre intended.]
An economy
is not just goods and services, but also people. We seem to have lost all proportion in what a
shock to our economy we experienced this past year. Without delving into details, let me be
descriptive.
Just in
April 2020 alone, near the beginning of the pandemic when we had a national
lockdown, we lost [net] over 20 million jobs, and over 6 million people dropped
out of the labor force of near 165 million (about 8 million total dropped out
of the labor force and we have recovered around 5 million of that), and the
unemployment rate rose, just in that month, over 10% (from 4.4% to 14.7%), for
the worst month in U.S. history, even nothing during the Great Depression came
close to that.
The month
before, March 2020, when the international economy shut down, there was a
sell-off of U.S. treasuries to raise cash.
The Fed stepped in to the tune of over $1 trillion per day; described by
the NY Fed’s John Williams “a staggering amount” to provide liquidity to
support the market activity.
Now if that
alone does not impress you for what a shock we experienced, let me relate this:
during that lockdown of about three weeks, the complete Los Angeles freeway
system was wide open without any hitch, and I have lived in Southern California
for over forty years.
May I
digress into a little detail now? Our
logistics system, the supply chain, is not just national in scope but
international. While we were
experiencing the lockdown, so was the rest of the world. Container ships were taken out of service and
temporarily put in mothball status at a variety of secondary ports around the
world.
You can think of our international/national logistics system
as queuing theory -- waiting/processing lines, or queues. One line is for processing (moving goods --
from Asia to Europe and the USA; and for moving goods across the USA) -- and
also for moving empty containers once they are off-loaded back to Asia; and
one line is a waiting line for reserve capacity (extra containers, trucks,
storage space, etc.) that is needed to fill gaps in the processing line or take
capacity out of the processing line when it is not needed and thereby make the
processing line flow more efficiently.
The whole system operates on flow -- keep the processing line flowing.
In normal operation the processing line capacity (the movement of goods) far
exceeds the waiting/reserve line capacity.
When the pandemic hit in February 2020, economic activity was
halted, greatly reduced. So the
processing line had to be shrunk -- back in Asia, and in Europe, and in the USA. Container ships were taken out of service and
put in temporary "mothball storage". When they are put in storage
(idled at smaller ports), they require a certain amount of processing to avoid
the marine corrosion that can deteriorate them in a short matter of time (90
days). Rail cars and trucks are
taken out of service and put in storage on lots. Empty containers and chasses
are taken out of service and put in storage on any lots they can find.
All of the companies that are part of this network -- big
companies, international companies, but also a lot of small operators who
operate on a small margin -- in various forms of transportation (rail, truck),
storage (warehouses, lots, small dirt lots [and we have them in Greater LA in
low-income neighborhoods]), brokers and freight forwarders and packing &
crating companies, etc. -- had to reduce their operations or in some cases
close down. Employees were laid off.
The waiting/reserve queue does not have the capacity to hold
all the trucks, trailers, containers, chasses, and especially the container
ships that were taken out of service.
In the case of the empty trailers/containers/chasses -- these
items are probably stored anywhere in the country where the owners (shipping
companies in most cases; but could also be freight brokers) could find cheap
storage rates.
So, as economic activity picks up, it will take a little time
to put all the pieces back together in order to get good flow moving again.
It takes time to deprocess the container ships that were
"mothballed" for several months. And who knows where some folks put all those empty
trailers/containers/chasses?
Two things need to happen to rid the economy of inflation.
(1) The shock to the economy was due to the pandemic. We have
to either conquer the pandemic, or learn to live with it. Then we will return to
some sense of normalcy.
(2) And then, the economy will normalize along with prices,
and we will probably be at a new and higher price level for our large economy
and without the inflationary pressures.
The analogy you could make to understand a shock to the
economy would be when we came out of war time periods into post-war, more
normal, periods – like after World War I when we experienced a short (18-month)
depression or the short, but sharp, recession we had in 1946/1947 right after
World War II. 1946 was the second worse calendar
year in our entire history, right after 1932 during the Great Depression.
Normally when we have a big shock to our economy after coming
out of a big war we can have a deflation (1921 and 1922) or inflation (1946 and
1947). When we shutdown the economies
world-wide from February to April 2020, our Federal Reserve along with the
fiscal stimulus of the federal government, pumped enormous amounts of money
(well into the trillions of dollars) into various aspects of the economy to
keep it somewhat afloat, putting a bottom on the recession, in order to avoid a
deflation. We perceive a deflation to be
worse than an inflation, because of the negative consequences on investing for
the future. One moral hazard of that is
that asset prices have not corrected and have spiraled upward.
Whether all that funding that went into the economy to keep
it afloat will result in long-lasting inflation will depend on raising our
productivity levels as we go forward. We
have had very poor rates of productivity, as measured by the Real GDP, since
2001, skipping the pandemic year of 2020 – yearly averaging 1.98%; and only 2.41%
if you leave out the recession years, well below our historic yearly averages
of well over 3% per year (3.77% since 1790 and 3.03% since 1947; and 4.53% during
the ten years of the 1960s). This is also
true for labor productivity (output per hour), in which the rate of labor productivity
has been in a downward trend since 2005.
So what it will take to turn things around, we will just have to see;
but, there is plenty of room for corrective action. There is no need for us to return to the
inflation of the 1970s – this is not a similar situation.
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