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Inflation explained

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Wed, Jun 9, 2021 04:32 PM

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Inflation Explained By Bill Bonner Wednesday, June 9, 2021 Jim Rogers… Jim Cramer… John Bo

[Bill Bonner’s Diary]( Inflation Explained By Bill Bonner Wednesday, June 9, 2021 [Bill Bonner] YOUGHAL, IRELAND – “Pity the American small business owner… ” writes Dear Reader H.R.E.: “I’m dealing with it as a landlord. Can’t get parts and materials and can’t get labor. Both cost more than ever. Plumbers at $300 per hour. AC guys closer to $500 per.” Breitbart reports: Small Business Optimism Drops on Labor Shortage and Inflation Worries The National Federation of Independent Business Optimism Index dropped two-tenths of a point to a reading of 99.6 in May. This followed three straight monthly increases but was the second straight month in which results undershot expectations. And more inflation sightings from our dear readers... Stephen G.: The MSRP of a 1964 Ford Mustang was $2,368 and an ounce of gold was pegged at $35.10, which works out to a little over 66 ounces of gold. Today, 66 ounces of gold will buy you two BMW Z4s, with almost $20K left over. I think this says as much about the destruction of the dollar as it does about gold as a store of value. I also remember buying gasoline back in the early ’60s for right around 20 cents a gallon. I remember being struck by the fact that a gallon of gas and a pack of smokes were about the same price. So two silver dimes would buy a gallon of gas in 1963. And, guess what, two silver dimes will still buy a gallon of gas – with change – back in some parts of the country. And that’s just going by the spot price of silver, not the huge premiums being charged on eBay and most other sellers. Fred T.: At the real day-to-day level, inflation is rampant. We get Chinese on Thursday nights. Last Thursday, when I picked up the order, I got a severe case of sticker shock. They had raised the price of their entrees 40% – from $9.99 to $14. Unbelievable. They said their food costs have skyrocketed. Trust me, it is not transient. The price will never be reduced. And Goku V.: Take a butterfinger. In 1978, it was 4 ozs and cost 10 cents in a vending machine in grade school. By 1993, it was down to 3.4 ozs and cost 25 cents. The last time I saw one, it cost $1.69 and was 1.51 ozs. Take the snack pack of butterfingers. When they came out, they were 10 oz bars for 99 cents. At their cheapest, they were 12 x 1 oz bars for 88 cents at Walmart. Today, they are over $3 and are down to 6 x 55 oz bars. Do the math! Recommended Link [Legendary Financial Anchor Appears in New Video]( [image]( Jim Rogers… Jim Cramer… John Bogle… Peter Lynch… All great investors… And Bob Sellers interviewed them all… One man, however, could top them all… Teeka Tiwari… Over the last 5 years, his AVERAGE investment pick is up 281%. J.P. Morgan did a study. They found the average investor only made 2.5%. That means Teeka has been averaging 100 TIMES more! What’s his secret? And what’s his #1 recommendation today? [Get the Full Scoop HERE.]( -- Confusing and Misleading Here at the Diary, we don’t really care what things cost… how much people earn… or what interest rate they get on their savings. All that matters is that these figures be true. Then, people can take the “information content” of the prices and make their choices. The trouble – speaking as though we were a serious economist – is that today’s prices, wages, and interest rates all lie. The information content – bent and distorted by the Federal Reserve’s fake money – is false. It confuses us. It misleads us. It creates bubbles and BS. Here, we make a small effort to straighten it out. [Featured: Watch Demo of Elon Musk’s Next Big Project]( False Argument Many times, in these pages, we have pointed out that [a new car or a new house is much more expensive today than it used to be](. But the price alone – twisted up by the feds – tells us nothing. We have to adjust it for “inflation.” We can do that, as our dear reader did above, quoting the price in real money – gold or silver. Or, we can figure it in time – how many working hours it would take to earn enough to purchase said house or car. Either way, the real price comes out at two to three times more than it was in the 1970s. Then, the apologists for the fake-money system tell us that we’re wrong. We’ve failed to take product improvements into account, they say. “A car today is a lot better than one in the 1970s.” The Bureau of Labor Statistics actually adjusts auto prices downward to reflect quality enhancements. But this argument is false. Technological improvements can make a car better (or worse). But they also should reduce the expense of making it. The two costs – producer and consumer – should change at more or less the same rate. So there’s no reason to think a Ford F-150 should cost more in 2021 than one in 1971. Higher Wages Another reason you might think today’s car is more expensive than one from 50 years ago is that wages are so much higher. A person working somewhere on the auto supply chain in 1971 would have earned an average of about $3.60 an hour. Today, he’s earning nearly $25 an hour. But wait. We need to adjust for “inflation.” And when we do that, our colleague David Stockman tells us that the typical employee in the manufacturing sector hit his peak earnings in 1978. Here we are, 43 years later, and his real, inflation-adjusted wages have gone down 6%. No wonder he wanted to Make America Great Again; he remembered when wages actually went up. He must feel he’s been cheated over the last 40 years, even if he has no idea how the flimflam worked. And he’s right. However much auto prices have gone up, none of that money went into his pocket. Recommended Link [Bill Bonner: Shadow-Banned?]( [image]( Have [America’s top booksellers refused to carry Bill Bonner’s final book]( You won’t find new copies of Win-Win or Lose at Barnes & Noble… and not a single copy is floating around on eBay. In fact, the only used copy we could find was going for $79 on Amazon. Which is why Bill recently authorized us to take drastic steps to put a copy in your hands essentially free – as part of this limited time offer. [To claim yours, click here]( Cheated Again At the top of the money pyramid, the elites have stocks and bonds. An increase in stock prices – even if it is a phony increase, caused by the Fed’s money-printing – can bring them additional wealth. But most people rely on their time to pay the bills. They sell it, hour by hour, week by week, year by year. And while the Fed continues to buy financial assets at a rate of $120 billion per month… it has never paid a penny for a working man’s time. Stocks and bonds go up. Wages do not. Still, if he works hard and is careful about saving his money, an assembly-line worker may build up some capital of his own. Were he to save, say, $2,000 every year over a 40-year career of putting nuts and bolts together, he would have $80,000! And then, he could earn interest on it. Alas, the interest rate has been falsified, too. Adjusted for inflation, had he put his money in a savings account in 2008, he’d have less money today than he had then. This year alone, based on the present inflation readings, on $80,000 of savings, he’d lose another $2,000. Cheated again! [Featured: The 3-Stock Retirement Blueprint]( Simple Solution And now… with the official “inflation” rate over 5% (annualized, based on the first quarter), the feds are busily figuring out how to keep the scam going. “It’s complicated,” they say… which is surely true, thanks to the many curve balls they’ve thrown. But behind the complexity is the simple [Quantity Theory of Money]( (QTM). This tells us that the more money is in circulation, the higher prices will go. When economist Milton Friedman proposed the fake-dollar system (what was he thinking?!), he said the Fed should increase the supply of dollars at a rate roughly equal to the rate of GDP growth. That way, the quantity of money would go up at about the same rate as the supply of goods and services. No surprises. No shortage of liquidity. No fear of inflation or deflation. And no price distortion. Oh happy day! Recommended Link [Man Who Predicted 2020 Crash Issues Next Major Warning]( [image]( The firm that called the EXACT PEAK of the dot-com boom [has just issued another major prediction](. If you’ve got money invested in the market – and especially in popular tech stocks – this is critical information for the days ahead… [Watch the Video]( -- Simple Explanation Friedman set 3–5% as the perfect rate. But that was when the economy really was growing at a 3% rate. Over the last 14 years, the real rate of GDP growth – adjusted for inflation – was under 1.3%. So even a 3% increase in the supply of money would be twice as much as it should be. But guess how much the money supply (the Fed’s balance sheet) grew last year. Five percent? Ten percent? More? Oh Dear Reader, [you already know](. Seventy eight percent, March 2020 to March 2021. The number is so staggering, we can hardly believe it ourselves. So let us set aside the Plague Year as exceptional in every way, and go back to the turn of the century. Well… since this century began, U.S. GDP has gone up from about $10 trillion to about $22 trillion. A solid double. But the Fed’s balance sheet? Around $700 billion 20 years ago, if it had kept pace with GDP growth, it would be around $1.5 trillion today. Instead, it’s now around $8 trillion – five times where it should be. If we were looking for a simple explanation of inflation, need we look any further? Regards, [signature] Bill --------------------------------------------------------------- Like what you’re reading? Send your thoughts to [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=Inflation explained). --------------------------------------------------------------- MAILBAG A dear reader responds to Bill’s essay on the [Quantity Theory of Money]( meanwhile, others focus on inflation and government debt levels… A side comment to your QMT article. I would note that aside from the inflation increase, the larceny could also include a step in the direction for DMT. This would be Digital Monetary Theory. If all else fails, go digital, and the problems fade and become covered up (and maybe only an article of past endeavors). All of this larceny could be a reason to void the dollar eventually and follow China into the digital world. – Russ F. It has happened even faster than I thought. At the discount grocery store I work, the people are returning like a wave. The meat department can’t keep up! It will be interesting to see what happens next. – Frank L. As you’re likely well aware, increasing interest rates would devastate bank balance sheets as things stand because, as you know, the correlation between securities and interest rates is negative. All of the debt, and hence credit, is by a significant amount collateralized by other debt securities, which are assets on bank balance sheets. It is obvious to see the issue when rates rise. That is not to say that the Fed won’t allow rates to rise. They may even allow rates to rise a meaningful amount... although I seriously doubt it. However, if they do, they are going to have to have the authority and willingness to buy all of those depressed assets at prices no one outside of the central bank would be willing to buy. – Aaron K. Might the Federal Reserve allow interest rates to rise? Will the Fed continue to warp the numbers for its own benefit, as Bill explains? Write us at [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=Inflation explained). IN CASE YOU MISSED IT… [Retirement funds need a boost?]( Jeff Clark: “What if I told you there was a way to boost your retirement portfolio fast? And with less risk. Imagine putting $1,000 into the market and getting $2,000 out – not just once, but over and over again. Sometimes in as little as 48 hours. That’s what’s possible when you follow my approach. I call it the “Money Multiplier.” This technique can make you $1,400… $5,420… $7,470… in a matter of weeks. So, if you’re tired of doing things the hard way…” [Click here to see the “Money Multiplier” presentation.]( [image]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Get Instant Access Click to read these free reports and automatically sign up for daily research. [image]( [The Ultimate Guide to Taking Back Your Privacy]( [image]( [The Gold Investor’s Guide]( [image]( [An Insider's Guide to Making a Fortune from Small Tech Stocks]( [Rogue Economincs]( Rogue Economics 55 NE 5th Avenue, Delray Beach, FL 33483 [www.rogueeconomics.com]( [Share]( [FACEBOOK]( [Tweet]( [TWITTER]( To ensure our emails continue reaching your inbox, please [add our email address]( to your address book. This editorial email containing advertisements was sent to {EMAIL} because you subscribed to this service. To stop receiving these emails, click [here](. Rogue Economics welcomes your feedback and questions. But please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized advice. To contact Customer Service, call toll free Domestic/International: 1-800-681-1765, Mon–Fri, 9am–7pm ET, or email us [here](mailto:memberservices@rogueeconomics.com). © 2021 Rogue Economics. All rights reserved. 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