Wednesday, October 14, 2009

A much needed breather

Everyone's busy arguing over whether we're going to have a "V" shaped recovery or a "W" shaped recovery (or an "L" shaped recovery). I've no greater clue than anyone else, but regardless of how it falls out, the similarity of our situation to that of Japan in the previous decade augurs for a double-dip at least, before anything long-run-positive occurs. If the boffins are right and we're going to have a rallying economy for the next year or so before the double-dip danger really rears its head, then this presents a much needed breather for households to repair their balance sheets and maybe accrue some savings. A second dip would likely be more violent than the first, as the "true disbelievers" would have all been shaken out by then, so savings cushions will be critical -- I don't know what the macro trend is looking like, but we're doing exactly what the average Japanese consumer did in the '90s: welding our wallets shut. Sure, it was bad for their retail sector and will be awful for ours (with commercial real estate to fall right on it's heels), but with baseline unemployment running 16%, deflation rampant and with equal risks of stag-disinflation and stagflation to follow, who cares?

But I'll take the breather.

Monday, October 05, 2009

It's Officially Here



That's YoY price changes; deflation is now here even when measured by price (the symptom thereof, not the real thing). It was already here, of course, but now we can expect to see people asking the government to find a way to keep prices from coming down (insanity...)

And in other fun, here's the first negative disposable personal income in 60 years:

(hat tip: the above from Mike Shedlock)


What kind of insanity might we expect people to ask from the government now that the chips are officially down? Price supports? Consumer dept-relief? Michael Moore in the White House (now that he's made all that money going after, to paraphrase Bill Hicks, "that anticapitalism dollar -- that's a great market!")? Whatever it's gonna be, hang onto yer hat and save your pennies, because money's getting more expensive, and that'll make debt even more so.



For more cheerfulness, head to EconomPic's latest labor force graphs.

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