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As every school child knows, water is formed by the two elements of hydrogen
and oxygen in a very simple formula we all know as H2O. Today we start a series
that starts with the question, What are the elements that comprise deflation?
Far from being simple, the "equation" for deflation is as complex as that of
DNA. And sadly, while the genome project has helped us with great insights
into how DNA works, economic analysis is still back in the 1950s when it comes
to decoding deflation. Notwithstanding the paucity of understanding we can
glean from the dismal science, in this week's letter we will start thinking
about the most fundamentally important question of the day: is inflation, or
deflation, in our future?
But quickly, I want to thank the many people who wrote very kind words about
last week's letter. Many thought it was one of the better letters I have done
in a long time. If you did not read it, you
can read it here. And of course, you can go there and sign up to get this
letter sent to you each week for free. Why not become of my 1 million (plus
and growing) closest friends?
The Failure of Economics
Among the economists and writers I regularly read, there are some who, if
they agree with me, I go back and check my assumptions - I must have been wrong.
Paul Krugman is one of those thinkers. I admit to his brilliance, but his left-leaning
philosophy does not particularly square with mine, and I find that most of
the time I disagree.
That being said, I strongly encourage you to read his essay in the New
York Times Magazine, which comes out this weekend. It is worth the high
price of the Times to read it, if you can't get it online. It is a
very hard critique and analysis of the failure of current macro and financial
economic thought, which didn't even come close to predicting the current
financial malaise. Indeed, as he points out, most schools of thought said
the state we are in could not happen. You can read at the essay if you are
a member, or register for free if you are not. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/magazine/06Economic-t.html?_r=1.
Krugman writes, as I have in repeated columns, that we have taught two generations
of economists and financial practitioners faulty theories. Even now, believers
in the Efficient Market Hypothesis and CAPM hold to their beliefs in the face
of clearly contrary evidence. It is a very thought-provoking piece and worthy
of a long weekend read. He names specific names and pulls no punches. This
is as close to starting a barroom brawl as you get in economic circles.
He calls for a return to and fresh analysis of Keynesianism. Sigh. I would
go further. A plague on all their houses. Whether Keynes or Friedman (monetarism)
or von Mises (the Austrian school of economics) or the rather new school of
behavioral economics, they all have deficiencies and (sometimes gaping) holes
in their logic. At the same time, they all contribute to our general understanding
of the world, and there are benefits to studying them.
Let me risk an analogy. It is like reading about some religious scheme for
interpreting the world and then becoming a true believer, arguing for that
point of view as received wisdom - it's your belief system. Five Nobel laureates
say this and seven say that. My guru is smarter than your guru. Look at how
the math proves this point. And so on...
Krugman concludes: "So here's what I think economists have to do. First, they
have to face up to the inconvenient reality that financial markets fall far
short of perfection, that they are subject to extraordinary delusions and the
madness of crowds. Second, they have to admit - and this will be very hard
for the people who giggled and whispered over Keynes - that Keynesian economics
remains the best framework we have for making sense of recessions and depressions.
Third, they'll have to do their best to incorporate the realities of finance
into macroeconomics.
"Many economists will find these changes deeply disturbing. It will be a long
time, if ever, before the new, more realistic approaches to finance and macroeconomics
offer the same kind of clarity, completeness and sheer beauty that characterizes
the full neoclassical approach. To some economists that will be a reason to
cling to neoclassicism, despite its utter failure to make sense of the greatest
economic crisis in three generations. This seems, however, like a good time
to recall the words of H. L. Mencken: 'There is always an easy solution to
every human problem - neat, plausible and wrong.'"
I agree we need to examine our assumptions. I am not sure that makes me want
to unreservedly embrace Keynes. Keynesians missed as badly as anyone else in
this crisis. Yes, the Austrians generally called some of the problem, but their
solutions call for 25% unemployment and an unworkable global economy and a
serious depression. Not sure that I want to sign up for that, either. And,
they totally discount the concept of the velocity of money, which we will look
at next week.
We need a new and better economic understanding, not some semireligious adherence
to dogma laid down by men who were in no way familiar with current world conditions.
Keynes, von Mises, Fisher, Schumpeter, Minsky, Hayek, Smith, et al. were giants.
They absolutely must be read and understood. But a real science builds on the
work of the former generations and does not hold onto theories as if they were
scripture.
As much as many economists would like to think so, economics is not a precise
science. A global economy cannot yield to hard math in the way that one can
model a protein, at least not with any model that has yet been offered. At
best, the models let us see through a glass darkly, suggesting the potential
for connections between a few variables, while assuming that all others are
held constant. It is precisely the illusion that we can model the economy that
got us into the current mess.
(By the way, good friend Paul McCulley has written a very interesting essay
on why the Fed has to change their models on inflation targeting - the Taylor
Rule is not up to the task - and whether or not to deal with bubbles before
the fact, rather than mopping up after they burst. What was assumed has clearly
not worked. You can read it at www.pimco.com.)
I am often asked what school of economic thought I adhere to, and the answer
is, none. I would rather try to get it right. And rather than argue for one
policy or another (which admittedly I sometimes do), it is more important to
figure out what those who actually will effect policy will do, and then make
sure we are not in the way of the train they are sending down the tracks. Agree
with Krugman or not, he is one of the principal conductors on the train.
And that brings us back to the elements of deflation.
The Super-Trend Puzzle
I am a big fan of puzzles of all kinds, especially picture puzzles. I love
to figure out how the pieces fit together and watch the picture emerge, and
have spent many an enjoyable hour at the table struggling to find the missing
piece that helps connect the patterns.
Perhaps that explains my fascination with economics and investing, as there
are no greater puzzles (except possibly the great theological conundrums or
the mind of a woman, about which I have only a few clues).
The great problem with the economic puzzles is that the shapes of the pieces
can and will change as they rub against one another. One often finds that fitting
two pieces together changes the way they meld with the other pieces you thought
were already nailed down, which may of course change the pieces with which
they are adjoined, and suddenly your neat economic picture no longer looks
anything like the real world.
(Which is why all of the mathematical models make assumptions about variables
that allow the models to work, except that what they end up showing is not
related to the real world, which is not composed of static variables.)
There are two types of major economic puzzle pieces. The first are those pieces
that represent trends that are inexorable: they will not themselves change,
or if they do it will be slowly; but they will force every puzzle piece that
touches them to shift, due to the force of their power. Demographic shifts
or technology improvements over the long run would be examples of this type
of puzzle piece.
The second type is what I think of as "balancing trends," or trends that are
not inevitable but which, if they come about, will have significant implications.
If you place that piece into the puzzle, it too changes the shape of all the
pieces of the puzzle around it. And in the economic super-trend puzzle, it
can change the shape of other pieces in ways that are not clear.
Deflation is in the latter category. I have often quipped that when you become
a Federal Reserve Bank governor, you are taken into a back room and are given
a DNA change that makes you viscerally and at all times opposed to deflation.
Deflation is a major economic game changer. You can argue, as Gary Shilling
does, that there is a good kind of deflation, where rising productivity and
other such good things produces a general fall in prices, such as we had in
the late 19th century.
But that is not the kind of deflation we face today. We face the deflation
of the Depression era, and central bankers of the world are united in opposition.
As McCulley quipped to me this spring, when I asked him if he was concerned
about inflation, with all the stimulus and printing of money we were facing, "John," he
said, "you better hope they can cause some inflation." And he is right. If
we don't have a problem with inflation in the future, we are going to have
far worse problems to deal with.
Saint Milton Friedman taught us that inflation is always and everywhere a
monetary phenomenon. That is, if the central bank prints too much money, inflation
will ensue. And that is true, up to a point. A central bank, by printing too
much money, can bring about inflation and destroy a currency, all things being
equal. But that is the tricky part of that equation, because not all things
are equal. The pieces of the puzzle can change shape. When the elements of
deflation combine in the right order, the central bank can print a boatload
of money without bringing about inflation. And we may now be watching that
combination come about.
Final Demand and Income
For instance, inflation always seems to be accompanied by higher wages. That
makes sense, as workers want more to justify their labor if prices are rising.
But today we have wages dropping over time. Yes, even though wages went up
this month by 0.3%, it was all due to a one-time increase in the minimum wage.
Without that government mandate wages would have been flat or falling. Look
for wages to fall over the rest of the year.
There are no pricing pressures on wages. Look at this very eye-opening graph
from my friends at one of my must-read letters, The Liscio Report. (www.theliscioreport.com).

Throughout the last decade, the number of strikes involving a thousand or
more workers averaged about 22 (but averaged over 300 annually from the time
they started tracking this item). We are on target this year for 2, an amazing
62-year low. Indeed, we have the opposite happening. Workers are seeing jobs
lost, wages being slashed, hours being cut back, and a loss of benefits, as
businesses react with cost cuts to the lack of demand.
While it is technically possible to have inflation with rising unemployment
and falling wages, it would take a great deal of monetization to achieve, and
that will bring us to a new idea in a few paragraphs.
Unemployment Was NOT a Green Shoot
But quickly, let's look at today's unemployment numbers. This was not the
way one would want to celebrate Labor Day. Unemployment rose to 9.7%. Some
take comfort in that unemployment in the Establishment Survey (where they call
existing business and poll them) was only down by 216,000, which admittedly
is better than 600,000 but is still a very bad number. Rising unemployment
is not the stuff that inflation is typically made of. And there are reasons
to think the picture may be worse than that. Here are a few thoughts from David
Rosenberg:
"What was really key were the details of the Household Survey, which provide
a rather alarming picture of what is happening in the labor market.
"First, employment in this survey showed a plunge of 392,000, but that number
was flattered by a surge in self-employment (whether these newly minted consultants
were making any money is another story) as wage & salary workers (the ones
that work at companies, big and small) plunged 637,000 -- the largest decline
since March (when the stock market was testing its lows for the cycle). As
an aside, the Bureau of Labor Statistics also publishes a number from the Household
survey that is comparable to the nonfarm survey (dubbed the population and
payroll-adjusted Household number), and on this basis, employment sank -- brace
yourself -- by over 1 million, which is unprecedented. We shall see if the
nattering nabobs of positivity discuss that particularly statistic in their
post-payroll assessments; we are not exactly holding our breath."
The ISM numbers came out this week and, while manufacturing is up, the service
industry (which is far larger) is still contracting, and the employment elements
in the surveys show employers are still planning to cut jobs. Think about almost
11% unemployment next summer in the middle of the political season. Watch the
competition among politicians to demonstrate they care and "get it." And watch
as they spend your money to show how much they care.
And from the above mentioned Liscio Report: "As we outlined back in
May, financial crises hammer employment, resulting in average losses of 6.3%
followed by a long flat line. We hate to point it out, but we're currently
down 4.8% from the December 2007 onset, and if US job losses in this recession
stay in line with the major financial recessions in "advanced" countries studied
by the IMF, we stand to lose another 1.8 million jobs. Some of those will likely
be taken out in upcoming benchmarks, stimulus money has some clout, and no
one has a reliable crystal ball, but we need to remember where we are in a
painful cycle if we see some hopeful flickers."
That would take us to well over 11% unemployment.
Interesting statistic. Want to know where wages are rising? Think federal
government workers. The gap between civilian and government workers was less
than $13,000 nine years ago, but now is almost $30,000. Inflation has been
24%, but government wages are up 55%. According to a recent release from Rasmussen
Reports, a government job remains "the top employment choice in today's
economic environment." (chart from Clusterstock)

States, counties, and cities are having to make deep cuts, in both jobs and
programs. Today's Wall Street Journal talks about the cuts in state
after state. States cannot print money like the US can, so at some point they
have to either raise taxes or cut spending to balance their budgets. Raising
taxes just makes it less profitable for businesses to remain in your state.
There is a very high correlation with high state taxes and unemployment.
The following chart shows how rapidly income taxes are falling. Sales tax
receipts are down. At some point voters are going to demand that their federal
government show some of the same restraint that households, cities, and counties
are being forced into. My bet is that next year raises for government workers,
even those in unions, will come under attack. They won't be cut, but watch
as political backlash builds.

Without federal stimulus, the GDP of the US would have been over minus 6%
in the second quarter, not the minus 1% it was. The third quarter would be
flat to down and not the plus 3% it is likely to be. Housing and autos will
turn down as the stimulus on those markets goes away.
I think it is very possible we will see a negative GDP by the first quarter
of next year. Unemployment will still be rising. Deflation will be more of
a problem, because the housing component (the largest portion of the consumer-inflation
index), based roughly on rentals, is clearly under pressure. While we don't
have enough space this week to go into detail, savings are up and consumer
spending is down. Without the stimulus, things would be much worse.
Here's the kicker. Expect to see a big push for another large stimulus package
next spring (and maybe sooner), as the effects of the current one wear off.
The government wants to bring back demand by getting consumers to spend again.
And you can count on unemployment benefits being extended. A tax holiday on
Social Security taxes below a certain income? In the short run they can do
it, but at a long-run cost.
It is going to be hard for a Democratic administration to not push for another
large stimulus. That is what Krugman and his fellow travelers will be pushing.
Classic Keynesian thinking wants both for the government to run large deficits
and for the central bank to print more money. Remember, last year I said that
the Fed would print a lot more money than they are talking about in the current
plans. They are going to have the cover to do so, because deflation is going
to be seen as the problem.
Next week, we will look at money supply and the velocity of money, savings,
consumer demand, and more as we further explore the complex molecule that is
deflation.
But one last thought, as I have had a lot of questions on gold recently. "Isn't
gold telling us that inflation is coming back?" The answer is no. Since the
early '80s the correlation between gold and inflation has dropped to zero.
Gold has had very little to say in the last 30 years about inflation.
But what it may be saying is that paper currencies are a problem. Gold is
going up not only in dollar terms, but in euros, pounds, yen, and more. My
view is that gold should be seen as a neutral currency. The dollar is the worst
currency in the world, except for all the others. Is it possible the Fed will
not respond and print more money next year? Sure. And the dollar could rise
as deflation kicks in. The only time we saw the purchasing power of the dollar
rise in a sustained manner was during deflation, in the last century.
The race is not always to the swiftest or the fight to the strongest, but
that's the way to bet. And right now, my bet is the Fed will print money to
fight a double-dip recession and deflation. And gold would be one way to play
that bet.
Washington, DC, San Diego, and Johannesburg
Quick inside industry note: Many RIA and brokers have left some of the large
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world's top hedge-fund managers. Now that the advisors are independent, they
are looking for a similar platform.
Altegris Investments has a world-class lineup of top-tier hedge-fund managers
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And if your clientele consists mostly of smaller clients, you should look
at the platform of trading advisors at CMG. http://cmgfunds.net/public/mauldin_questionnaire.asp
Next week I have to go to Washington, DC for a quick trip and then the next
night fly to San Diego for the Schwab conference. Coincidentally, both Altegris
and CMG will be at the conference. I will be around those booths on Tuesday
the 15th. Look me up.
And next Tuesday I will speak via satellite to a CFA conference in Johannesburg.
I've done a lot of TV over satellite, but not a full, hour-long speech and
Q and A. This should prove interesting.
It is getting late and time to hit the send button, so I will cut my remarks
short and just wish you a happy Labor Day and a great week.
Your ready for a holiday analyst,
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