household spending

BoJ Shows Explicitly How Shrinking Is Done

By |2015-08-05T15:34:00-04:00August 5th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With base comparisons out of the way moving past the calendar months of Japan’s tax change last year, the continuing recession re-emerges. Real wages fell 2.9% year-over-year in June despite “inflation” remaining far below (thankfully for the Japanese) Bank of Japan’s intentions. Contractual earnings nominally were slightly higher but “special cash earnings” fell 6.5% after rising 25% in May. That [...]

Still Peering At Our Unstable Future

By |2015-07-27T16:00:29-04:00July 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The old cliché is that everything of significance in life is a marathon rather than a sprint. In Japan, such sentiment strains all reason as there is no way that any marathon, economic or otherwise, could possibly be expected to last more twenty-five years. But here it is in 2015, thirty years after the Plaza Accord and BoJ’s first massive [...]

Japan Proving The Monetary Black Hole

By |2015-07-17T10:59:35-04:00July 17th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Japanese household spending increased 5.5% in nominal terms in May; 4.8% in real spending growth. That was the first monthly increase since November and since it was a positive number, and not as typically close to zero, it is being hailed as another great sign of QQE success. With Q1 GDP revised up to nearly 5%, economists are back to [...]

Consumers Stay In Recession Which Is Taken As A ‘Surge’?

By |2015-06-11T10:04:59-04:00June 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I honestly don’t know where to begin: U.S. retail sales surged in May as households boosted purchases of automobiles and a range of other goods even as they paid a bit more for gasoline, the latest sign economic growth is finally gathering steam.   The Commerce Department said on Thursday retail sales increased 1.2 percent last month after an upwardly [...]

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 [...]

Disinflation Is Not Cash

By |2015-03-30T16:23:14-04:00March 30th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Personal spending had fallen, seasonally-adjusted, for two consecutive months placing warning upon the household sector. The just-released estimates for January show only the smallest of rebounds, just +0.1%, in February suggesting that nothing yet has been resolved in either direction. Unlike last year, there is no surge that would indicate a temporary straying from the otherwise only tepid path. This [...]

But The Payroll Report…

By |2015-03-27T15:36:44-04:00March 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It wasn’t supposed to be the case that China would steal all the attention from Japan. We are only a few days away from QQE’s second anniversary and all expectations were purposely set to be a full-blown revival by now. The dedication and skill with which the Japanese economy was handled was meant to conclusively demonstrate with no debate that [...]

GDP Is Speculative

By |2015-02-27T12:34:57-05:00February 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think the ongoing destruction in the Japanese Household sector demonstrates very well a specific shortcoming about economic statistics like GDP. The basic calculation of the particular measure that forms the headlines of almost all commentary is a comparison of the current quarter to the previous one. That right away opens the door to incongruities as there remain very definite [...]

Still No Gain

By |2015-02-27T11:03:54-05:00February 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Despite all evidence to the contrary, an imbalanced ledger of data that grows more imbalanced by the month, commentary continues to describe QE as pro-growth stimulus. As usual, the purest form of rebuke to that sentiment can be found in Japan where QQE has performed a global service just not in the way its theorists and practitioners had envisioned. The [...]

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