You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letter Gilder's Guideposts, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Gilder Guideposts] [Technology Report]( [Tech Report PRO]( [Moonshots]( [Private Reserve]( Guideposts: A Subversive at the Fed Proves Destroying Jobs is Not the Answer by George Gilder and Richard Vigilante
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But the real story of the graphs is that inflation first subsided and then remained astonishingly stable during 40 years of vigorous economic growth. During the steepest drop in unemployment, from late 2011 till the onset of the pandemic in 2019, inflation remained essentially flat, between 2.0 and 2.5%. âStickyâ CPI 1980 - 2022 Unemployment Rate 1980 - 2022 Still, we canât be too hard on the WSJ headline writers. Despite overwhelming empirical evidence that economic growth and full employment growth heal inflation rather than inflame it, some amazingly large portion of the economic establishment still either believes in âthe linkâ or acts as if it does. Most econometric models use some version of the Phillips Curve to forecast inflation. The Fed, of course, must cling to the link; to concede the point would be to concede its irrelevance to its statutory mission of balancing price stability with full employment. [Have You Seen This $11 Trillion 'Tech Strip?']( While many folks today are wondering what to do with their money⦠a revolutionary âsheetâ of new technology has quietly sparked an $11 trillion tech revolution. Investors who get in FIRST have a rare chance to position themselves in front of a tsunami of profits. [Click here to see how anyone can profit fast.]( All the more gratifying to learn from WSJ author Nick Timiraos that the latest powerful dissent from the orthodoxy comes from the Fed itself. Austan Goolsbee, president of the Chicago Federal Reserve Bank, destroys the employment-inflation âlinkâ as an explanation for post-pandemic price increases. He begins by pointing out how badly the traditional assumptions have performed so far. In the graphs below, the blue line shows the expected behavior when the Fed reacts to a surge in inflation with its typical tools. The red line shows what happened this time around. Reading the graphs backward from right to left, the graph of core PCI inflation shows that although typically inflation has lots of momentum even in the face of Fed responses, this time around it slowed much more quickly. The Fed did not start raising the Fed Funds rate until March 2022. By that time the rate of increase in Core PCE Inflation was already slowing. By early 2023 it had begun to fall, contrary to historical experience by which it would have continued to rise steeply into late 2024. The first, leftmost graph shows another anomaly. GDP started to fall before the Fed started raising rates. Then in late 2022, just as the Fed began its rate hikes, GDP first leveled off and soon began a modest recovery. The graph ends too soon to take Q3 into account, which would add to the anomaly as GDP rose at an astonishing 4.9% annualized. The middle graph is the most remarkable, and to supply-siders most gratifying. In the face of 11 consecutive rate hikes, boosting rates by some five points, employment soared even while, as the third graph already showed, inflation was declining. More people, doing more work, producing more goods and services, do not cause inflation. Neither does paying them in accord with what they produce. For Goolsbee, the anomalies demand an alternative account of the 2021-23 inflation, one that has little to do with Fed policy He argues that the âmost important factors were Covid-related,â including âwell documented negative supply chain shocks and unusual shifts in the composition of demand.â Adding to these âsupply-side difficulties, Covid reduced labor supply as labor force participationâespecially for women and those nearing retirementâdropped.â [A.I. Is Reshaping Investing: Are You Prepared?]( Traditional investing is out the window â A.I. investing has arrived. This dual-patented generative A.I. canâ¯predict market trends 1â3 days in advance. [Join this FREE online A.I. training class to learn more>>Â]( Supporting the supply-side view, Goolsbee cites research showing that the rate of price increases varied across âa wide range of industries,â suggesting idiosyncratic causes rather than a systemic decline in the value of the dollar. Moreover, âthe biggest price increasesâ were âassociated with the smallest increases in quantity [supplied], fully consistent with the role of supply shocks as an important driver of overall inflation.â He cited the Chicago Fedâs own model, as well as recent research including a paper co-authored by former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, as further evidence for the supply side explanation. As to why inflation has moderated, Goolsbee argues that the Fed, so far, has been largely irrelevant. The better explanation is that ânegative supply shocks and demand distortions have been unwinding steadilyâ and âsupply chains have improved considerably... and that improvement is likely to continue working its way through the economy.â One welcome development for longer term growth is a recovery âin labor supply... the prime-age labor force participation rate is at its highest level since 2001.â He speculates that âperhaps because of more flexible post-Covid work arrangements, the female labor force participation rate is hitting record highs, as is the participation rate for those with disabilities.â As for the Fed, he argues that though it has done little good so far, it may yet do great harm. Sticking to the usual assumptions about what âgrowth and labor market conditions mean for inflation... is a recipe for overshooting and causing an unnecessary downturn.â In particular, he urges his colleagues not to âobsess over the near-term path for real wages,â nor assume âthat a tight labor market with wages rising faster than prices would result in a wageâprice spiral.â Because near-term wages generally are stickier than prices, âlabor costs [are] a lagging indicator of inflation.â Using wage growth âto predict inflationâ and make âmonetary policy decisions... would almost certainly mean overshooting.â The Fedâs determination to put Americans out of work is the more vicious given its irrelevance. It should stop. P.S. Come join our Eagle colleagues on an incredible cruise. In addition, this is all-inclusive -- meals, drinks and even the excursions are included in your one-time price! 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[The Editors]
George Gilder, Richard Vigilante, Steve Waite, and John Schroeter
Editors, Gilder's Guideposts, Technology Report, Technology Report Pro, Moonshots, and Private Reserve About George Gilder: [George Gilder]George Gilder is the most knowledgeable man in America when it comes to the future of technology and its impact on our lives. He’s an established investor, bestselling author, and economist with an uncanny ability to foresee how new breakthroughs will play out, years in advance. George and his team are the editors of Gilder Technology Report, Gilder Technology Report Pro, Moonshots and Private Reserve. About Us:
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