Monthly Archives: November 2009

Producer Price Index Inflation On The Rise

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released their monthly Producer Price Index statistics that have been seasonally adjusted.  What becomes overly clear is that Crude Goods, items in the earliest stage of production / completion, have all been experiencing inflation since the beginning of this year.

What this begins to setup is that manufacturers are willing to spend more for raw goods, meaning that end user goods will eventually see price increases.  We should be prepared to see continued inflation of basic goods.  Milk and butter have seen increases of 30+% year to date.  When milk is more expensive than fuel on a retail per gallon basis and we continue to experience inflation, we’re in trouble.

Whether or not the Producer Price Index is a true leading indicator of inflation of the Consumer Price Index; that remains to be seen.  Historical data from past recessions looking at leading and lagging indicators provide anecdotal evidence that mass inflation is on the horizon.

PPI-BLSData Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

Did The Fiscal Stimulus Fail?

Unemployment Rate with and without recovery plan

What does this mean? One interpretation is that the fiscal stimulus has failed to achieve what Team Obama thought it would. Another interpretation is that the baseline was worse than they believed at the time.

Rather than pointing fingers we need to drive overall government accountability. In light of the shifting baseline, it’s impossible to hold the administration accountable for whether its policies are achieving their intended effects.  To be clear, this lack of accountability is not a feature on this specific administration but is, instead, a reflection of the inherent uncertainties associated with macroeconomics.

The administration, however, has not been particularly forthright in admitting to this lack of accountability. Indeed, the act of releasing quarterly reports on how many jobs have been “created or saved” gives the illusion of accountability without the reality.

There are two significant points we need to focus on; neither of them are partisan:

- First, as much as we’d like to point to one political group or another, incalculable macroeconomic consequences have played a substantial role in undermining the global economy; regardless of the party in office.

- Second, we must radically increase government reporting transparency and continue to make additional raw data available to allow for third parties to validate conclusions and assumptions.

If we must assign blame, assign it to variable change (Bayes’ theorem). We’ve always had several options available to combat the recession. However, due to the complexity of the solutions, financial burden and time to implement, we haven’t had the luxury to eliminate solutions after a short period allowing us to increase the probability of achieving the greatest success.

Third Quarter 2009 GDP Growth is a Red Herring

United States GDP for the 3rd quarter grew at 3.5% according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.  The third quarter being the first to see growth since the economic decline about a year ago.  Sounds great — but there’s a red herring.  Cash for Clunkers provided massive unseasonal auto industry demand.  Motor vehicle output grew by a seasonally adjusted 158%.  This growth is clearly unprecedented and we should expect it to decline like a waterfall next quarter — growth never to be repeated again without this type of government incentive.

United States GDP

With Cash for Clunkers providing 1.66% GDP growth, net growth for the quarter was 1.89%.  Still maintaining growth and that’s a good sign.  The one problem with that.  Cash for Clunkers stripped out an unknown amount of future demand for the auto industry; perhaps mostly from the fourth quarter but likely beyond that.  So while the short term gains have been exceptional, the lasting effects of Cash for Clunkers may actually have a negative impact on GDP in the fourth quarter.  Hold on, the ride isn’t over.