PIMCO’S Gross proposes tax increase


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Raise taxes with unemployment rising due to a shortage in aggregate demand?

Just in case you thought the great marketer understood the monetary system:

Pimco’s Gross: Maybe Obama Should RAISE Taxes

By: JeeYeon Park

June 3 (CNBC) — Inflation is likely three to five years down the road, and investors should stay relatively close to the front end of the yield curve where the bond prices are protected by the Fed position of low Fed funds and interest rates, said Bill Gross, co-CIO and founder of Pimco.

“Further out on the curve, anticipate deterioration in inflation, a deterioration possibility in terms of the dollar, which will produce negative returns for those long-dated securities,” Gross told CNBC.

Gross said the recovery is being driven by a $2 trillion annualized deficit. To take its place in the economy would require at least $1 trillion increase in consumption and investment, which would be quite challenging as baby boomers and consumers become more thrifty.

He also said the Obama administration should cut back on inefficient defense programs — and consider raising taxes.


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Bernanke/ISM


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Karim writes:

Doesn’t break a lot of new ground. Forecasts appears consistent with prior statements and still casts financial markets in a fragile light despite recent run-up in equities. Makes no mention of upping asset purchases and issues longer-term fiscal warning:

*The most recent information on the labor market–the number of new and continuing claims for unemployment insurance through late May–suggests that sizable job losses and further increases in unemployment are likely over the next few months.

Agreed. And unemployment continues to increase until GDP growth outpaces productivity gains.

*Recent data also suggest that the pace of economic contraction may be slowing.

*Nonetheless, a number of factors are likely to continue to weigh on consumer spending, among them the weak labor market, the declines in equity and housing wealth that households have experienced over the past two years, and still-tight credit conditions.

*We continue to expect overall economic activity to bottom out, and then to turn up later this year.

Agreed. Deficit spending is not large enough to support aggregate demand and savings desires at levels that equate to modest GDP growth

*Even after a recovery gets under way, the rate of growth of real economic activity is likely to remain below its longer-run potential for a while, implying that the current slack in resource utilization will increase further.

Agreed. And weak overseas economies both limit export growth and bode for increased imports.

And higher crude and product prices raise nominal imports and dampen us domestic demand.

Also, state and local govt are also just now engaging in cutbacks and tax increases.

*Financial markets and financial institutions remain under stress, and low asset prices and tight credit conditions continue to restrain economic activity.

Yes, this allows lower taxes and/or higher government spending to support aggregate demand. Unfortunately, the noises from the administration are moving in the other direction, with President Obama’s latest statement that the US has ‘run out of money.’

*Unless we demonstrate a strong commitment to fiscal sustainability in the longer term, we will have neither financial stability nor healthy economic growth.

I do not agree. In my book fiscal responsibility means supporting demand at desired levels of output and employment.

Financial sustainability is not an issue with non convertible currency and floating exchange rate policy, as it was when on the pre 1934 gold standard..


Non-Mfg ISM up from 43.7 to 44 but details weaker.

  • New orders down from 47 to 44.4
  • Backlogs down 44 to 40
  • Export and import orders both down


This indicates the slowing in the rate of decline is slowing, supporting the forecasts of nominal GDP hovering near 0 and unemployment continuing to rise.

  • Employment up from 37 to 39
  • Prices paid up from 40 to 46.9


There could be a rethinking of the output gap and an upward adjustment of the ‘neutral rate of unemployment if CPI continues to rise.


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Bernanke remarks


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As another associate quipped after reading Bernanke’s statements:

‘We are all deficit terrorists now!’

From Mike Norman who’s getting very good at this:

Mike Norman Economics

New entries on my blog today (Wednesday, May 3, 2009).

Bernanke hasn’t a clue!!

Bernanke warns on deficits as Treasury rates rise

Add Ben to the list of people who don’t understand our monetary system!

Bernanke warns on deficits as Treasury rates rise: Part II

Someone ought to tell Bernanke that the Fed sets rates. PERIOD!! END OF STORY!!!

Bernanke: start work now to curb US budget deficit

Curb the budget, reduce private sector savings. The relationship’s an identity, Ben!

I hope you enjoyed this market rally over the past three months because if the Administration follows Bernanke’s advice–and it’s likely that they will-kiss the rally goodbye and say, “Hello,” to new lows in the market sometime later this year or next year. Depends on when and how fast they “curb the deficit.”

-Mike Norman


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Merkel attacks central banks


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>   Karim writes:

>   Surprising comments show political difficulties of QE in Europe. With fiscal policy constrained
>   and the Euro strong, that means more pressure on ‘conventional’ monetary policy: ECB to
>   keep o/n rate low for long.

Yes, agreed. Shows no understanding of monetary operations whatsoever.

With the old German model they had tight fiscal to keep domestic demand and costs down to drive exports. And they also bought $US to keep the mark at ‘competitive’ levels.

With the euro they are also keeping fiscal relatively tight to keep a lid on domestic demand and costs to drive exports, but can’t buy $US for ideological reasons (that would look like the euro is backed by dollars, etc.) so instead of exports rising the currency appreciates to levels where exports remain stagnant.

Merkel attacks central banks

by Bertrand Benoit and Ralph Atkins

June 2(FT) —Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, criticised the world’s main central banks in surprisingly strong terms on Tuesday, suggesting that their unconventional monetary policies could fuel rather than defuse the economic crisis.

The attack on the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank is remarkable coming from a leader who had so far scrupulously adhered to her country’s tradition on never commenting on monetary policy.

“What other central banks have been doing must stop now. I am very sceptical about the extent of the Fed’s actions and the way the Bank of England has carved its own little line in Europe,” she told a conference in Berlin.

“Even the European Central Bank has somewhat bowed to international pressure with its purchase of covered bonds,” she said. “We must return to independent and sensible monetary policies,
otherwise we will be back to where we are now in 10 years’ time.”

Ms Merkel’s decision to ignore one of the cardinal rules of German politics – an unwritten ban on commenting monetary policy out of respect from central bank independence – suggests Berlin is far more concerned about the route taken by the ECB than had hitherto transpired.

Berlin is concerned that the central banks will struggle to re-absorb the vast amount of liquidity they are pouring into the markets and about the long-term inflationary potential of hyper-lose monetary policies.

The ECB’s efforts have been focused on pumping unlimited liquidity into the eurozone banking system for increasingly long periods. But last month (May), it followed the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England in announcing an asset purchase programme to help a return to more normal market conditions.

The ECB announced it had agreed in principle to buy €60bn in “covered bonds”, which are issued by banks and backed by public sector loans or mortgages.

The covered bond purchases, however, were only agreed after extensive discussions within the 22-strong ECB governing council. According to one version of May’s meeting, the council had discussed a €125bn asset purchase programme that would also have included other private sector assets, but only the purchase of covered bonds was agreed.

Axel Weber, ECB council member and president of Germany’s Bundesbank, has been among those who expressed scepticism about direct intervention in financial markets. In a Financial Times interview in April he expressed “a clear preference for continuing to focus our attention on the bank financing channel”.

Mr Weber has also been among the most proactive council members in warning that the monetary stimulus injected into the economy will have to be reduced or even reverse quickly once the economic situation improves.

Details of the covered bond purchase scheme will be unveiled by the ECB after its meeting on Thursday. One likely solution is that the package will be split according to eurozone countries’ capital shares in the ECB, which would result in Germany accounting for about 25 per cent of the €60bn programme. Meanwhile, the ECB is widely expected to leave its main interest rate unchanged at 1 per cent, its lowest ever.


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from Mikenormaneconomics.org


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Mike Norman Economics

Some thoughts

If we ever enact a balanced budget amendment, take yourself and your family and move to Canada or China.

Obama believes the U.S. has “run out of money.” Scary. Our president doesn’t understand our own monetary system. Even George Bush understood this.

Any country that spends in its own currency, where that currency is not backed by gold or bound by some fixed exchange can NEVER run out of money!

We are ceding our position as the world’s largest economy to China because of stupid policies that are based on myth and fallacy.

The demise of GM was not due to putting workers’ interests over the company and shareholders. It was precisely the opposite!

The easiest way to lower “debt” (if that’s what you want to do) is to sustain full output and employment.

If the private sector can’t sustain full output and employment for whatever reason, then gov’t should!

Here in America we mock the Europeans as being, “Socialist.” Did anyone notice that Europe’s economy is larger than ours and adding size?

By definition, those Socialist Europeans are richer than us! And they have free health care, education, 6-weeks paid vacations, new cars, homes, movies, culture and all the consumer items that we have, in abundance. Not bad for a bunch of commies!

Our leadership is destroying America’s real terms of trade because of irrational sensitivity to perceived “imbalances.”

We care more about the Chinese standard of living than our own, apparently!

For every debit there is a credit. For every liability there is an asset. For every borrower there is a saver. This is all definitional. It’s double entry accounting! Did anyone in Obama’s administration take an accounting course? Has any Republican taken one? Has any Democrat taken one?


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ISM/Fed


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Karim writes:

Overall, manufacturing still contracting, but at a slower rate. Rebound in orders likely due to credit supply not being as sharp a constraint as it was in Q4 and inventory drawdown. Increase in backlogs suggests production may actually stop contracting in next couple of months. But with employment basically unchanged, it seems that this relative improvement is viewed by manufacturers as unrelated to longer-term timing and scope of recovery. Anecdotes below all over the place.

Looks to me like evidence the deficit spending is doing its job of relieving fiscal drag.

  • “Some amount of havoc is about to erupt, with companies pushing for increased capacity when suppliers have taken capacity offline.” (Computer & Electronic Products)
  • “Business is actually better than plan.” (Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products)
  • “Realistically, we don’t see any of our major customers looking to place business until mid-2010 at the earliest.” (Machinery)
  • “April was flat on sales. May looking better.” (Primary Metals)
  • “Business still trending downward, but not as fast.” (Chemical Products)



May April
Prices paid 43.5 32.0

Moving up with crude prices as reluctantly anticipated.



Production 46.0 40.4

Back towards ‘nuetral’ levels for flat GDP



New orders 51.1 47.2

Orders expanding some from a low base as expected.

This is enough for GDP to muddle through at modest positive levels



Backlog of Oders 48.0 40.5

Same



Employment 34.3 34.4

This will continue to stagnate as productivity gains will be sufficient to meet output demands



Export orders 48.0 44.0

Will move back up from depressed levels



Imports 42.5 42.0

Will move up with prices

This is good for financial markers/bad for obama vision — modest growth with continuing downward pressure on wages


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Incomes up .5%


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U.S. Consumer Spending in April Decreases 0.1%; Incomes Gain

By Courtney Schlisserman

June 1 (Bloomberg) — U.S. consumer spending fell in April for a second straight month as concern over rising unemployment prompted consumers to save.

The 0.1 percent drop in purchases was smaller than forecast and followed a 0.3 percent decrease in March that was larger than previously estimated, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The savings rate jumped to the highest level in 14 years.

Economists forecast spending would fall 0.2 percent, according to the median of 63 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a drop of 0.3 percent to a gain of 0.2 percent.

Incomes climbed 0.5 percent, the biggest gain in almost a year, reflecting increases in unemployment insurance benefits and social security payments associated with the Obama administration’s stimulus plan. Income was projected to also fall 0.2 percent, matching the March decrease.


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China not backing down on the push to export


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This is a few days old but shows all the talk about domestic demand isn’t taking anything away from the desire to export:

China to Take Steps to Boost Exports; Will Keep Currency Stable

May 27 (Bloomberg) — China’s State Council, or Cabinet, said the government will take steps to boost exports while keeping the country’s currency “basically stable,” the state television reported today.

Falling exports are the biggest challenge for the world’s third-largest economy, the council said.

China introduced a 4 trillion-yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package last year as exports slumped and economic growth slowed. Maintaining external demand can create favorable conditions for employment, businesses and domestic consumption, China Central Television said today, citing a council meeting headed by Premier Wen Jiabao.

The nation will keep its currency “basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level,” the council said, without elaborating.

China will take all measures to stabilize overseas demand as shrinking exports are the nation’s biggest challenge, “currently and for some period of time in the future,” the council said.

The government will focus on exports involving intensive labor and advanced technology, according to the report.

The government will arrange $84 billion in short-term export credit insurance for 2009, the council said. The coverage of export credit insurance will also be expanded, it said.

China will allocate additional funds to support exporter guarantees, according to the report. About $10 billion will be set aside as credit for the export industry in 2009, the state television said, without elaborating.


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Professor John Taylor on the exploding debt


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From the good professor who brought us the ‘Taylor Rule’ for Fed funds:

Exploding debt threatens America

by John Taylor

May 26 — Standard and Poor’s decision to downgrade its outlook for British sovereign debt from “stable” to “negative” should be a wake-up call for the US Congress and administration. Let us hope they wake up.

And yet another black mark on the ratings agencies.

Under President Barack Obama’s budget plan, the federal debt is exploding. To be precise, it is rising – and will continue to rise – much faster than gross domestic product, a measure of America’s ability to service it.

Gdp is a measure of our ability to change numbers on our own spread sheet?

The federal debt was equivalent to 41 per cent of GDP at the end of 2008; the Congressional Budget Office projects it will increase to 82 per cent of GDP in 10 years. With no change in policy, it could hit 100 per cent of GDP in just another five years.

Almost as high as Italy and Italy does not even have its own currency.

“A government debt burden of that [100 per cent] level, if sustained, would in Standard & Poor’s view be incompatible with a triple A rating,” as the risk rating agency stated last week.

Now there’s quality support for an academic position…

I believe the risk posed by this debt is systemic and could do more damage to the economy than the recent financial crisis.

‘Believe’? Without even anecdotal support? Is that the best he can do? This is very poor scholarship at best.

To understand the size of the risk,

I think he means the size of the deficit, but is loading the language for effect.

Is that what serious academics do?

take a look at the numbers that Standard and Poor’s considers. The deficit in 2019 is expected by the CBO to be $1,200bn (€859bn, £754bn). Income tax revenues are expected to be about $2,000bn that year, so a permanent 60 per cent across-the-board tax increase would be required to balance the budget. Clearly this will not and should not happen. So how else can debt service payments be brought down as a share of GDP?

This presumes an unspoken imperative to bring them down. Again poor scholarship.

Inflation will do it. But how much? To bring the debt-to-GDP ratio down to the same level as at the end of 2008 would take a doubling of prices. That 100 per cent increase would make nominal GDP twice as high and thus cut the debt-to-GDP ratio in half, back to 41 from 82 per cent. A 100 per cent increase in the price level means about 10 per cent inflation for 10 years. But it would not be that smooth – probably more like the great inflation of the late 1960s and 1970s with boom followed by bust and recession every three or four years, and a successively higher inflation rate after each recession.

Ok. Inflation, if it happens as above, can bring down the debt ratio. How does this tie to his initial concern over solvency implied in his reference to the AAA rating being a risk for our ‘ability to service it?’

And still no reason is presented that 41% is somehow ‘better’ than 82%.

Nor any analysis of aggregate demand, and how the demand adds and demand leakages interact. Just an ungrounded presumption that a lower debt to GDP ratio is somehow superior in some unrevealed sense.

The fact that the Federal Reserve is now buying longer-term Treasuries in an effort to keep Treasury yields low adds credibility to this scary story, because it suggests that the debt will be monetised.

So what does ‘monetised’ mean? I submit it means absolutely nothing with non convertible currency and a floating fx policy.

That the Fed may have a difficult task reducing its own ballooning balance sheet to prevent inflation increases the risks considerably.

And the presumption that the Fed’s balance sheet per se with a non convertible currency and floating exchange rate policy is ludicrous. All central bankers worth any salt know that causation runs from loans to deposits and reserves, and never from reserves to anything.

And 100 per cent inflation would, of course, mean a 100 per cent depreciation of the dollar.

He’s got that math right- if prices remain where they are today in the other currencies and purchasing power parity holds. And he also knows both of those are, for all practical purposes, never the case.

Why has he turned from academic to propagandist? Krugman envy???

Americans would have to pay $2.80 for a euro; the Japanese could buy a dollar for Y50; and gold would be $2,000 per ounce. This is not a forecast, because policy can change;

And it assumes the above, Professor Taylor

rather it is an indication of how much systemic risk the government is now creating.

So currency depreciation is systemic risk?

Why might Washington sleep through this wake-up call? You can already hear the excuses.

“We have an unprecedented financial crisis and we must run unprecedented deficits.” While there is debate about whether a large deficit today provides economic stimulus, there is no economic theory or evidence that shows that deficits in five or 10 years will help to get us out of this recession.

Huh? None??? What’s he been reading other than his own writings and the mainstream tagalongs?

Such thinking is irresponsible. If you believe deficits are good in bad times, then the responsible policy is to try to balance the budget in good times.

Ahah, a logic expert!!! That makes no sense at all.

The CBO projects that the economy will be back to delivering on its potential growth by 2014. A responsible budget would lay out proposals for balancing the budget by then rather than aim for trillion-dollar deficits.

‘Responsible’??? As if there is a morality issue regarding the budget deficit per se???

“But we will cut the deficit in half.” CBO analysts project that the deficit will be the same in 2019 as the administration estimates for 2010, a zero per cent cut.

“We inherited this mess.” The debt was 41 per cent of GDP at the end of 1988, President Ronald Reagan’s last year in office, the same as at the end of 2008, President George W. Bush’s last year in office. If one thinks policies from Reagan to Bush were mistakes does it make any sense to double down on those mistakes, as with the 80 per cent debt-to-GDP level projected when Mr Obama leaves office?

The biggest economic mistake of our life time might have been not immediately reversing the Clinton surpluses when demand fell apart right after 2000. And, worse, spinning those years to convince Americans that the surpluses were responsible for sustaining the good times, when in fact they ended them, as they always do. Bloomberg reported the surplus that ended in 2001 was the longest since 1927-1930. Do those dates ring a bell???

The time for such excuses is over. They paint a picture of a government that is not working, one that creates risks rather than reduces them. Good government should be a nonpartisan issue. I have written that government actions and interventions in the past several years caused, prolonged and worsened the financial crisis.

Lack of a fiscal adjustment last July is what allowed the subsequent collapse

The problem is that policy is getting worse not better. Top government officials, including the heads of the US Treasury, the Fed, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Securities and Exchange Commission are calling for the creation of a powerful systemic risk regulator to reign in systemic risk in the private sector. But their government is now the most serious source of systemic risk.

Finally something I agree with. Our biggest risk is that government starts reigning in the deficits or fails to further expand them should the output and employment remain sub trend.

The good news is that it is not too late. There is time to wake up, to make a mid-course correction, to get back on track. Many blame the rating agencies for not telling us about systemic risks in the private sector that lead to this crisis. Let us not ignore them when they try to tell us about the risks in the government sector that will lead to the next one.

The writer, a professor of economics at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, is the author of ‘Getting Off Track: How Government Actions and Interventions Caused, Prolonged, and Worsened the Financial Crisis’

It’s not too late for a payroll tax holiday, revenue sharing with the states on a per capita basis, and federal funding of an $8 hr job for anyone willing and able to work that includes federal health care, to restore agg demand from the bottom up, restoring output, employment, and ending the financial crisis as credit quality improves.


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Niall Ferguson: No One Has The Faintest Idea When The Economy Will Recover


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Harvard AND Oxford Professor, thank you!

Niall Ferguson: No One Has The Faintest Idea When The Economy Will Recover

by Niall Ferguson

May 29 (FT) —He thinks Obama’s economic forecasts are as much of an outlier possibility as another Great Depression. He’s also concerned, as we are, that there’s just not enough money in the world to finance all the borrowing the U.S. and other big countries will be doing over the next few years.

Barron’s: Is the worst over for the global stock markets and the economy?

Ferguson: It may look that way, but appearances can be deceptive. The stock market has actually tracked almost perfectly its downward movements between 1929 and 1931. Now that doesn’t mean that we are going to repeat the Great Depression. I don’t think we will, because the policy responses have been different. It would be excessively optimistic, however, to conclude from a relatively small set of green shoots in the economic data that we are all going to live happily ever after. It is certainly way too early to say the Obama administration is right that the economy is going to grow at 3% next year and 4% in 2011. I find that scenario as implausible as a rerun of the Great Depression…

When will the recovery come?

Nobody has the faintest idea what next year is going to look like. It isn’t clear yet that this is just a common recession. This is probably more like a slight depression. We won’t see a big V-shaped bounce. Much of the consumption growth in the decade up to 2007 was fueled by things like mortgage-equity withdrawal. That game is clearly over. Strip that out, and you are looking at an annual economic-growth rate in the U.S. closer to 1½% to 2% than 4%.

What is your disagreement with New York Times columnist and Princeton professor Paul Krugman about massive government borrowing?

This is one of the most interesting questions of the moment. The view of Keynesians, their Econ. 101 textbooks and the Nobel laureate at Princeton is that the world has an excess of savings over investments and therefore the deficit can be almost any size and it will be financed.

That is the problem with violating ‘Lerner’s Law’ and making the argument in the wrong paradigm. It invariably gets shot down like this:

My sense is that if the U.S. government tries to borrow $1.8 trillion in a year, that is an awful lot of bonds to sell at the same time [as] all the other major governments. It looks to me like a supply-and-demand story, and what tends to happen in those stories, regardless of the macro environment, is that the price of bonds tends to fall. The U.S. 10-year Treasury rate has moved up more than 100 basis points [one percentage point] since January. There is a problem in Britain, where the Bank of England had to protest about fiscal stimulus because it was causing a huge interest-rate problem. It is also happening here.

It is the blind arguing with the blind.

With this attitude it very well may take a world war to generate enough deficit spending to restore output and employment.


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