Economists - Not All Dogmatic
reality
I certainly spend a fair quantity of bits criticizing conventional economics and economists. However, there are always exceptions who question authority and see what is really going on. Paul Kasriel of Northern Trust is notable, but here’s another, Richard Alford. He is interviewed by Institutional Risk Analytics.
If the US consumer were to go back to savings rates of the 1996 period, then you are talking about savings going from essentially zero today to approximately 8% of disposable income. Since US GDP is about 70% consumption, that implies a decline in demand of about 5 to 5.5%. That would be a very dramatic effect.
No kidding. Because of course the decline in demand would reduce employment, which would further reduce income in a vicious circle. That is why Ben is moving heaven and earth to avoid an increase in savings.
Politically and economically, there is no painless solution to the imbalances in the US. For US policymakers, it seems that even short-term pain is intolerable. Nobody in Washington wants to bite the bullet and explain the full dimension of the required change to the US electorate, so we muddle. Going back to the early 1990s, US politicians have bought support from the voters by keeping consumption on an ever rising trajectory. For at least 12 years, we’ve had debt induced increases in consumption and the political class optimized their behavior to maintaining that illusion of rising consumption even as the economic fundamentals worsened.
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The US population is not ready to hear that their real levels of income, assets prices and other indicia of national well being may be falling or relatively stagnant for the foreseeable future. This is just politically not acceptable. So our politicians will attempt to maintain the appearance of growth, but not address the underlying causes.
Posted in Debt, Economics, Employment, Government, Income & Consumption, Inflation & The Dollar, Saving & Investment, Strategy & Scenarios, The Economy |