CERF Blog: Uncategorized
Condensed minutes of FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) meetings are released three weeks after each meeting. Detailed transcripts for the meetings in a given calendar year are released five years after the end of that calendar year. Thus, last month the detailed transcripts for the 2006 FOMC meetings were released. These transcripts have received a… Read more
Dan already summarized the meat of last Friday’s jobs report, but I wanted to briefly comment on one fairly esoteric point. The Friday release included an annual “benchmark revision” to the population, labor force and jobs numbers. Each year the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) updates historical data based on updates from the Census Department. … Read more
Today’s BLS jobs-report indicates the economy added 243 thousand jobs in January, which was about 90 thousand jobs above the consensus forecast of 155 thousand. Our forecast was 150,000. This gain was accompanied by a fall in the unemployment rate from 8.5 percent in December to 8.3 percent in January. The job-gains were pretty broad… Read more
The US savings rate is really low and has been for some time. For many years this was explained by the argument that people were getting wealthy through appreciation of their homes and stock portfolios, so the need for saving out of current income was low. And sure enough, household net worth did expand nicely… Read more
Louisiana Congressman Charles Boustany has introduced a bill banning withdrawals of welfare funds from ATMs at liquor stores, casinos, and strip clubs. Politicians do this sort of thing every now and then. It wasn’t that long ago that California’s legislature, in its own spasm of self-righteous Puritanism, was imposing its own, very similar, controls. This… Read more
This morning’s much anticipated fourth quarter GDP release provides a preliminary estimate of real GDP growth of 2.8 percent. To be fair, perhaps the anticipation is experienced mostly by forecasting economists and financial market watchers. I am always particularly interested in fourth quarter as it closes out the year and in this case I forecasted… Read more
Last September, I proposed (“The Warren Buffett Tax”) that the most effective way to extract a lot of tax revenues from Warren Buffett would be to impose a wealth tax. My tongue-in-cheek proposal was this: Tally up your assets and liabilities, calculate the difference (net worth) and then pay a tax of 20% on net… Read more
In his book Econoclasts1, historian Brian Domitrovic produces what he believes is the first historically rigorous account of the development of supply-side economics (that is, one that relies on primary sources). He reviews contributions to supply-side theory by Nobel Prize winning economists Robert Mundell and Robert Lucas, as well as significant contributions from outstanding economists… Read more
In a terrific book published last year, Antti Ilmanen1 has investigated the drivers of investment returns from a number of angles including asset class (that is, equities, fixed income, commodities), investment strategy (value, growth, momentum, leverage, carry), and risk driver (exposure to economic growth, inflation, liquidity). The basic idea is that you obtain strong investment… Read more
In a previous article (December 10, Goodhart’s Law and Monetary Policy) we discussed Goodhart’s Law which says that once an observed empirical relationship begins to be relied upon, it will no longer work. In that article we applied the law to monetary policy. Goodhart’s Law also applies to bank capital regulations. The Basel Committee on… Read more