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Over the past weeks we’ve been digging down into what might, or might not be the real story. Everybody seems to have an opinion or three, from world class money managers to yowling cretins, and none of them seem to fully add up. Whither the economy?
There is a bewildering array of evidence pointing to global inflation, except that it also indicates overcapacity, a la Hyman Minsky, which instead means it should be deflationary, except that supply is creating its own demand, hypothetically, in China at least, which should be inflationary, except that world shipping fell precipitously and is staying down, which means deflation, except that foodstuffs are gaining, inflationary, but Prechter says deflation, which Arun Motianey claims is the precondition for inflation, but consumer confidence plunged and the Politburo hates inflation and the Brits are certainly on the brink of a national collapse because they have collectively drunk themselves to terminal cirrhosis, credit card companies have run amok, people are cutting back like mad and saving every dime, in total contradistinction to the prior era where easy credit proliferated like rats in the New York subway system, which should be deflationary, except flooding the system with liquidity should be inflationary, except the banks won’t lend it to the businesses that really need it which is deflationary, and China is running an annualized GDP growth of 10.5% which is just nuts…
Baffling…infuriating…the truth is nobody has a firm idea… even Soros has gotten it wrong, way wrong, on occasion. What’s up?

Lorenz attractor
On one level we believe that we are beholden to mental models, or framing mechanisms, that no longer suffice to describe the complexity, nor the potential instability of this new economic condition; we’re tweaking prisoner’s dilemma models when the global economy is beginning to look like a 3D Julia Set in a sped up animation. Could be our metaphors and mental constructs no longer cut it. This baby has plain run off the known map. Some of those mathematical curiosities that we loved to play with more than a decade ago may be getting closer to necessary descriptors of the real world than we realized.

Which leaves us where? The Chicago Fed’s favorite all purpose indicator, the CFNAI, is flashing recovery. And we admit, the CFNAI is probably as good of an all purpose economic indicator as we know of, being a diffusion index of 85 indicators run through a principle components analysis.

CFNAI, Feb 22
The question then becomes, what kind of recovery is this actually? Optimally one recovers into a state of mild inflation, which encourages borrowing and sets into motion a virtuous cycle of credit expansion, hiring, equipment purchasing, product line upgrades, and so on. However, as Richard Koo of Nomura will cheerfully remind his readers, there is another potential scenario, the not so salubrious debt deflation. In this circumstance, even a subtle tilt towards deflation can induce large borrowers to use their profits to first pare down their existing debt load rather than invest in expansion and upgrading. Which, of course, leads to the unhelpful lost decade syndrome. Aided and abetted by a period of low interest rates. Like we have now.

Practically speaking, there is no way policymakers can entertain the idea of a prophylactic increase in interest rates without risking mini-depressions at the state level. But the problem is hardly restricted to the nitty gritty of keeping the street lights on at night in Colorado Springs. Japan too is facing a potential double dip back into grinding deflationary territory which in turn further deflects borrowing behavior into saving behavior (as deflations reward savers and punish borrowers)… only now it seems that the US consumer is finally learning the same lessons that the Japanese consumer learned 20 years ago.

We are of the opinion that economic phenomena often appear as social phenomena, at the level of shared values, ideals, behaviors, and shifts therein before they can be captured and quantified as numerical sort-of facts that make it to the public by way of the media blatheroons. We look for trends that are slowly working their pernicious ways to the surface. Such as…..

We must admit we find that disturbing on a multitude of levels. We recall that deflations have strong historical connections with phases of breakdown and decay. In the late 19th century nearly the entire agricultural sector was driven to bankruptcy by an extended deflation era. Deflations can be insidiously corrosive, slow moving glaciers that crush everything before them, unlike the swifter moving tsunami of hyperinflation. Each is coupled with a powerful social mood.
We take the prospect of deflation with great seriousness and no small degree of angst. We have noted as well that the Baltic Dry index, which reflects worldwide shipping of dry bulk goods such as ores, cement, grains, and the like, has remained at a surprisingly low level since the great breakdown, in spite of a couple of recovery bumps. Simply judging by the BDI, world trade is not recovering to anywhere near even the 2007 LOW, not the high.

Baltic Dry Index
On the other hand, there is China, which seems to be living in an economic universe so disconnected from our own it solicits disbelief. Is this in fact some form of massive decoupling that no one can adequately explain? Is this sustainable, a true breakthrough, a new epoch that makes fools of the naysayers, the great engine that will pull us out of what would have been a deep, cold worldwide depression?

China, India, and the Asian Tigers are, to put it mildly, on some kind of roll. As one writer put it, hot enough to make the devil sweat. But, my friend, when you go from 400 billion Yuan of bank lending to 1.4 Trillion Yuan in 2 quarters, you either really know what you’re doing or you’re about to burn the house down.

China promoters, Dr. Megatrends himself, John Naisbitt, included, seem to have bought the Unstoppable Giant Awakens scenario wholesale and retail. And for all we know he could be completely correct, or not. We have a few statistics that might help us appreciate the impact of China, more of an importer than many realize. Sure, they export manufactured stuff, but they still have a ravenous appetite for raw materials. Which they must buy on world markets. Which explains the extraordinary efforts they go to to insure uninterrupted flows of the elements of manufacture.

Thus we think it is fair to say that the Chinese relationship with the global economy is far more complex that the simplistic model that they sell us stuff and buy our treasury debt with the profits. A lot of that economic activity is leaking back out into the primary producer world, places like Africa. So the model of capital and material flows is
necessarily a more nuanced process of transforming economies they encounter and being transformed themselves by those contacts. China, for all of its legalistic and authoritarian rigidities, may be a novel form of a complex adaptive system that the American founders could not have imagined.

chaotic attractor
But complex adaptive systems can fall victim to their own contradictions and instabilities as well, and as far as we know, no imperial administrators for the entire duration of history have escaped an encounter with such systems suddenly taking on an unpredictable and frustrating life of their own. No rider has fully mastered the beast, although many have tried, and many have been seduced into the illusion that this time we have finally mastered it. We should be so lucky. And we never will be. Great Moderation, anyone?

With growth come growing pains. With hyper-growth come hyper-growing pains. Lao Tzu warned of this 2,500 years ago. Sudden wealth breeds envy, unfathomable greed, lust for power, ruthlessness, and often, terrible errors of hubris. We have noticed many reports of criminality, of the organized entity sort, and abuses of power.

Does this become a long running institutional struggle between power bases or will a central authority be able to impose a stable, uniform standard and rule of law across the extremely diverse population?
We cannot help but notice that the Western structure, as relatively wealthy as it is, with its excellent university system, with a long history of economic booms and busts, could have gone from the most overweening arrogance and sense of historical imperative to one of confusion and despair in less time than it takes to grow a fairly impressive plant behind one’s house or to put a child through one stage of education. Didn’t we also think that we had conquered risk and parked our vehicle at the end of history ?

Granted, this World Bank study of per capita electricity consumption is 4 years out of date, however, it is suggestive of how great the development gap actually may be between the USA and China/India. We tend to see this as an indication of the degree of “standard of living arbitrage” that exists between cultures. Our energy hogging ways speak to an outsized standard of living, just as the Chinese and Indian levels of electrical energy consumption point to the degree to which they are positioned to catch up to our levels of usage, which would be correlated with square footage of living space, the use of heating and air conditioning, lighting, entertainment systems and so on.
Given this metric we would infer that there remains an enormous upside potential for their consumer economies, and perhaps a degree of downside potential for ours as more and more highly skilled, highly educated work migrates East. One might infer as well that we have lifestyle addiction issues that will only be reframed by significant changes in flows of capital, goods, raw materials, and knowledge.

Paul Krugman is clearly concerned about the deflation scenario as well, but perhaps he does not see how intimately this dynamic is tied to the almost steroid driven drive for an improved standard of living in Asia.

We wanted to double check Krugman’s source of concern, so we composed the following two charts. In the first case, we compared the Dallas Fed’s trimmed mean deflator (the blue line) with the CPI–minus-energy chart for the same period (the red line). In both cases these do show, expressed in % change YoY, what might be taken for the beginnings of a deflationary process.

TM CPI - ALL CPI minus energy
On the other hand, there is energy, our national equivalent of pure glucose intravenous drip. Here we see an entirely different process unfolding. If everything else is a reasonably steady process slowly trending, energy pricing and energy’s effects on our economy are downright manic-depressive.

Energy CPI
We see the deflation conversation in areas like the convenience store industry, where the vice-chairman of Wal-Mart hopes to see deflationary pressures ending soon in his industry.

Hopefully, yes, we’ll be seeing that.



March 10, 2010 at 8:40 am
Hi Cornelius, I like those Lorenz attractors in your article! I agree, that no one has got firm idea – with respect to what is happening IMMEDIATELLY HERE AND NOW. If I understand correctly, you say, that no one has idea about the stock market direction, because inflation means UP and deflation means DOWN. (if I got it totally wrong, forgive me).
And that is truly so. Prediction of stock market is difficult. I try to avoid it.
However, as well as the curve on the picture #1 shows tendency to stick to one or several points, the stock market eventually gets to the point of right valuation. I mean, stock market is not efficient every time, but it efficient is most of the time.
And over the long run, I can tell for sure, that dollar, pound, even czech krown
, … will buy less 10 years from now. There is no mystery in it, as it was like that every time, since fiat money introduction. And good companies will do well.
I agree, that investors into overvalued equities in Japan in 1990 have still to wait. And that is our task, after all. As investors, we should not buy anything, which is overvalued. We should buy only when the odds are with us. When it is rainig gold, you come with a bucket. But mostly it is not raining gold. And than, we do not bet much.
Thanks again for inspiring article.
G.
March 10, 2010 at 4:25 pm
The conundrum we face today is particularly acute. I believe the reason for this is that the global economy has become truly multipolar, have more than one attractor basin. The Chinese process is one of being in the early, energizing stage of a long term inflationary arc, the steroid like onset of a process which can long term become highly debilitating, but is capable of pushing the Chinese economy into a larger orbit while the virtuous effects persist. Inflations have their place and they are often welcomed by the expansionist factions in any political body.
The United States happens to be in the far more advanced stage of using various policy strategies to try and inflate, disinflate, deflate, and redistribute our way out of various classes of difficulties. This leaves us with toxic residues of earlier strategies that have become embedded in our national character, our tax laws, and our long term investments and lack of long term investment in social goods such as infrastructure and education.
The Chinese are piling on state of the art infrastructure and rapidly upgrading their educational “plant”… so they are able to provide both advanced social goods like a brand new high speed rail system as well as an increasingly education workforce who can maximally take advantage of those social goods.
This is a fundamental global imbalance of opportunities. As the combination of opportunities and capital are moving to China we are probably experiencing a degree of capital relocation, similar to the way the carry trade affected both Japan and the West’s access to low cost Japanese capital during the long Japanese downturn.
Hedge funds found that they could borrow very cheaply at Japanese rates and lend richly at western rates, which had the side effect of increasing the capital flood into the real estate markets, as there wasn’t much else that could have absorbed that excess and provided a worthwhile rate of return. The output gap had been closed and the western economies had been maxed as far as they could significant socially transforming change. We we’re about to get 19,000 miles of new high speed rail track laid here in the USA.
The same dynamic hold with China as the new place where things get done with not much red tape and a highly motivated workforce… capital inevitable chases the best opportunities. When capital leaks out of the US economy, disinflationary forces become felt at the same time that the same capital is flooding into China, where inflationary forces are equally felt.
March 10, 2010 at 6:40 pm
Hi again, sorry, now it became too complicated for me, I did not get the point. Can you please summarize for me in few words? Do you expect quick and unpredictable changes with negative impacts on average people and huge opportunities for investors/speculators? Do you think odds are that decrease of economic power here in west will be balanced by increase of economic power in China?
Nice day, G.
March 14, 2010 at 9:39 pm
I understand you perplexity, as this isn’t always a clear or intuitive subject.
The clearest one shot idea is that economic processes like inflation and deflation have life cycles, they start off on one note (usually the population feels the good effects of the process first, and once it gets a taste, decides that if a little of a good thing is fun, a lot of the same thing out to be a real blast)…
The idea that follows on this is that as a process “matures” it has a tendency to naturally create more of its own condition, a little inflation gets into people’s minds and creates the expectations that cause more inflation, which really does cause more inflation, causing people to take more and more defensive measures against yet higher inflation. That’s why economists speak in terms of “inflation spirals” and “deflationary vortexes”…
Some benefit from inflation, if, like a good ponzi scheme they get in early with the right investments… inflation is very kind to borrowers, because they borrow with dollars at one value, and they effectively pay back the loan with cheaper dollars, so their real interest rate on that loan may be much less than the nominal rate…
Unsurprisingly, this acts as a powerful stimulant for taking out more loans, watching an asset rise in value, selling it off at a nice profit, and going back to the bank and borrowing more… and more.. and more.. sooner or later inflation changes character from the fun-benign-frat party version to the crazed meth tweaker version… which ought to be a bad thing.. except if say, you happen to be a government with massive debts payable in dollars, such as, say, the United States…
Someone, somewhere, with the necessary authority might just might be tempted to “go for it” and open the floodgates for a period of high inflation which lowers the real value of the dollars it is obligated to pay back.
However, as with physics, there are no free lunches, only transformations of state. High inflation plays absolute havoc with the relationship between generations, as those who have amassed substantial real assets will be able to ride inflation (think a wealthy older generation), while those who are living from paycheck to paycheck will see their earning power eroded and their savings effectively liquidated. Serious bummer and produced extreme political responses if the social imbalances get out of hand. Think Weimar Germany.
China obviously is in a younger, more virtuous, more productive phase of the long term inflation cycle, so surges in money supply and credit can be used to bring a backwards economy up to parity with western standards. We in the west on the other hand are dealing with bloated bureaucracies and overbuilding, so inflation will only add to the misery side of the ledger without contributing the same basic productive improvements it will, for the time being, in China.
March 15, 2010 at 6:51 pm
nice video on the subject
http://marcfaberchannel.blogspot.com/2010/03/inflation-vs-deflation-faber-vs-mish.html