abenomics

It’s Not Stupidity, It Is Apathy (For Now)

By |2016-05-31T18:42:34-04:00May 31st, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Ten days ago, it was reported that the Bank of Japan for the first time set aside reserves against expected losses should its massive portfolio of JGB’s finally move toward QQE success. The main part of all this “stimulus” has been the accumulation of primarily government bonds at massive premiums. If it were ever to actually work, then the Japanese [...]

The Mirage of Irregular GDP And How Economists Get Away With It

By |2016-05-23T13:14:00-04:00May 23rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Last week, Japan reported GDP growth of 1.7% in Q1. That was much better than expected and led to all the usual extrapolations about how bright the future is in Japan now that QQE is working (and NIRP since that was started during the quarter). In this devalued economic world of central banking for the sake of central banking, context [...]

The Nearing End of ‘Stimulus’

By |2016-02-16T13:08:51-05:00February 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

As China, Japan is the definition of insanity. GDP fell 1.4% in Q4 2015, marking the fifth contraction out of the past nine quarters and yet the word “stimulus” remains attached to QQE, the Bank of Japan and Abenomics in general. At this point, how much more time and sample size is necessary before calling it a failure? In about [...]

Why Japan Went NIRP: No More Doubts About QQE

By |2016-02-08T17:25:23-05:00February 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When real household spending fell by 4.6% in April 2014 it was cause for concern. That was the first month after the tax hike hit and the decline in spending was much larger than anticipated (by economists, at least). Despite the heavy toll, Bank of Japan officials remained (outwardly) wholly unconcerned over what was believed a minor setback on the [...]

Japan’s QQE Continues To Destroy Japan’s Economy; Economists Argue Whether Or Not That Might Be Recession

By |2015-12-29T13:17:13-05:00December 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japan has a history of revising its economic figures all over the place. The QQE era seems to have made GDP accounting something of an art form rather than the quantitatively determined “science” of how it is presented. For example, last December the Japan Times ran a story on December 2, 2014, under the headline Japan’s Recession May Be Shallower [...]

Japan’s Continual Recession Reveals Something Important About US Consumers

By |2015-11-16T16:49:16-05:00November 16th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japan fell back into recession again in Q3, expected this time, which is actually being charitable to Abenomics and especially QQE. To even believe that this monetary insanity has produced even marginal benefits, it has to be given “credit” of at least mini-recoveries in between these “technical recessions.” It is a problem far worse than that, as even a technical [...]

It’s Not Really Inflation; Euphemism For The Whole ‘Dollar’ Economy

By |2015-09-28T15:44:09-04:00September 28th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declared last week that Japan is no longer suffering from deflation the day after his own government statistics showed that Japanese prices declined for the first time since QQE began. That is actually great news for the Japanese people, though Abe and Kuroda at the Bank of Japan continually pledge to end the relief. Abe’s [...]

Japan Is A Stimulated Disaster; Why Not More?

By |2015-08-17T18:16:18-04:00August 17th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Japanese economy sank yet again, more than suggesting there is no recovery from the “inflation”-led recession that began six months before any tax change. Almost right from the start of QQE, Q4 2013, Japan’s GDP has either been contracting or barely rising. The net result is the monetary hole left behind by so many flawed theories. Primary among them, [...]

From Money to Psychology, Japan Reveals The Basis of Corruption

By |2015-05-29T11:06:50-04:00May 29th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

At some point in the middle of the last century, economics of money shifted to economics of psychology. When Milton Friedman wrote his 1963 book, A Monetary History, it was an effort that uncovered the role of money in the collapse of the Great Depression as he and his co-author, Anna Schwartz, saw it. Whether or not it was a [...]

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