Economic indicators tell a clear story in good times but go crazy when there is a crisis.
I psychology of inflation is different than the past, because people have so little experience with it and don’t really believe in it.
It used to be that inflation fueled spending because people figured they should buy it now because it will cost more later. They’d figure there is no point in saving because the value of money will get eroded.
Today people see a Big Mac meal costs $9.99 at McDonalds and think “I can’t afford that!”, gas is $4.99, diesel is close to $7 and people think they have to stop the bleeding by hitting the brakes on consumption.
I think supply chain problems are taking a bite out of demand. I have wanted to buy equipment for my photography/art hobby and I can’t get it. I am saving money until it is available, not buying something else.
> They’d figure there is no point in saving because the value of money will get eroded.
I would figure investing it is better than buying crappy food or holding dollars that are losing purchasing power. Maybe there was no VOO or VCSH decades ago, but it is an easy no brainer nowadays.
Of course it's easy to cherry pick in hindsight. But we're talking about people with cash right now, they are investing at current valuations not valuations from 6 months ago.
Your argument always assumes you pick a point in time and never consider new information or fundamental information. Such as, there were less computers doing things in the world yesterday than today and there'll be more tomorrow. Seems like a reasonable investment over the medium term.
> People in the 1960's thought inflation would be benign for stocks because earnings go up with inflation but the 1970s was a bad decade for stocks.
I hear this a lot. Its true that stock returns relative to inflation weren't great, but what was better? I mean, cash lost a huge percentage of its value. Stocks seemed to pace inflation.
Were bonds a better investment during this period?
Makes me wonder about the fate of all these unprofitable startups
If you couldn’t turn a profit during practically the best time for tech startups in 2020-21, I can’t see how you can turn a profit when money is much tighter.
> If you couldn’t turn a profit during practically the best time for tech startups in 2020-21
Online/software-heavy services, tend to be fairly short runway (nothing like the decade plus typical for biotech firms), but still aren't generally zero runway to profitability.
It will be the same as the .COM bubble. Most will die and a few major players will emerge. Especially the startups that were built to be acquired will have a problem.
OP states people are looking at food and not buying it because it's too expensive. @lotsofpulp suggests these same people invest their money. I don't think people who can't afford that much food are going to be investing that much. 'Have you tried not being poor?'
I thought PaulHoule was referring to people eating BigMacs and buying gas for leisure, hence the decision to not splurge on those things in contrast to previous decades where they may have.
> I would figure investing it is better than buying crappy food or holding dollars that are losing purchasing power.
Isn’t that more of a class distinction than a decision for most people? The rich will invest either way, and the poor won’t. Both will buy food. The economy still runs on consumption (which is kinda required for investment to even work, right?)
> it is an easy no brained nowadays
I’m a little skittish on making new investments at the moment, and it seems to be going around? You’re saying that’s obviously foolish and people should be investing right now despite potential indicators of a recession?
> Isn’t that more of a class distinction than a decision for most people? The rich will invest either way, and the poor won’t. Both will buy food.
There are more than two classes. The bottom 60% might be running on fumes, but the 60% to 70% might be thinking about foregoing spending $2k on a road trip that they can choose to invest instead, and the 70% to 80% might be thinking about a $4k Hawaii trip that they would forego. And the 80% to 90% might avoid $10k on an international destination. And the 90% to 95% might choose to invest $5k in the market instead of buying first class seats and put an extra $50k in an IRA as opposed to a new car.
> You’re saying that’s obviously foolish and people should be investing right now despite potential indicators of a recession?
Yes. Buy low, sell high. If you need to sell within a few years, then stick to cash or bonds. Although, what I actually meant by “easy no brainer” is that it is dead simple to invest in all equities at basically no cost due to the availability of extremely low cost broad market ETFs like VOO. Anyone can invest in the whole market for cheap within seconds of logging into their brokerage account.
As I wrote in another comment, for money you need within a year or two, stick it in an FDIC insured saving account, for money within a few years, put it in VCSH, and for money you do not need for a long time, put it in VOO or VTI or similar and forget about it.
Yes of course there are more than two classes, but usually the line between having enough free cash to invest or not is pretty binary, what’s what I want to say I meant there by ‘rich’ and ‘poor’ ;). I’m sure most of us here are in one of the middle classes, but speaking personally, my investments have really never rested on having excess income, and I very much doubt that it does for most people above the, say, 70% line. Investments and savings are made in advance of tallying play cash. When I forego a vacation, the money gets dispersed among other optional uses, maybe a stay-cation and a PlayStation and dropping a little extra in the kids’ savings accounts.
On the flip side, eating at McDonalds in the first place is generally speaking a class indicator. I assumed that was the reason @PaulHoule used McDonalds. Foregoing McDonalds is quite unlikely to result in having enough cash to invest in something else. You still have to eat, and a lot of foods are more expensive than McDonalds even from a typical grocery store.
Businesses and services that were absolutely overrun a year ago are now dead quiet. You go to change a car title or renew your license and you will be seen right away instead of waiting 2 hours. Same thing with restaurants and bars. I went the other night and was pleasantly surprised that it was just me and the barman. People are already reflexively pulling back on discretionary items. It won't be long before we have a surge in car repossessions and foreclosures. Kind of hard to justify paying on a car you can't even afford to put gas in.
The issue with inflation and supply chains is renegotiation. Inflation force organizations and people to renegotiate deals and that take time which slow down the supply chains performance.
> It used to be that inflation fueled spending because people figured they should buy it now because it will cost more later. They’d figure there is no point in saving because the value of money will get eroded.
I highly doubt this was ever the case, rather than what some orthodox econ types told themselves without evidence.
Fair, but buying a long lived asset to both save money and get a larger capital gain is different than rushing to buy depreciating goods because one is worried their prices will go up further.
More broadly, if there was price stability for single family homes, buyers would be outraged!
As a homeowner I’d be fine with price stability. I don’t see why the price should go up (and that just increases my tax burden). I certainly don’t want to be in the hole if I sell though.
I agree, I bought my house as a home, I really don't need or want it to go up in value. I think many people would be better of if we had policies discouraging residential housing as an investment.
My home's value has gone up over 30% since I bought it around 18 months ago (and 50% since 3 years ago) - I couldn't afford to buy my own home if I were house shopping today.
> More broadly, if there was price stability for single family homes, buyers would be outraged!
If there was price stability for homes, people buying them for living in rather than as investments would be happy, since affordability would increase with real (or even nominal, depending on the sense of “stability”) wages.
We did that in Q4 2021/Q1 2022 amongst my friend group. Literally hundreds of thousands of dollars in spending among us in land, tools, etc. Stock market looked high, don't want to stay in the dollar.
It's not a complex economic environment out there. You can look at a very small set of numbers and get the picture; buffet-index (total market value to GDP) and GDP growth in dollar terms says the market is high. CPI, M1 money supply, and debt-to-GPD says the dollar will reduce in value. So where else you going to park your money? If there's machines you can use, that was a good time. Most people don't need machines so it's all about houses and land and anything not showing as much peak. Not academic; critical to maintaining the value a person has put into savings from all that labor.
> Stock market looked high, don't want to stay in the dollar.
If you are looking to cache out of the stock market, that's quite different: you were worried about both inflation and the stock market falling after a bubble.
Most people have negligable liquid savings. Even if they wanted to, they lack the means to do what you did. Your behavior is anomalous and not representative of a broader macroeconomic trend.
There is some evidence that spending habits during high inflation do vary across incomes and between durables and nondurables. Believe it or not, people actually study this sort of thing.
As your post highlights, it gets more complicated the more factors one considers, like disposable income, stock ownership, etc. What you're describing here is rudimentary, not some groundbreaking, econ-slaying assertion.
That is a working paper written in casual form that isn't vetted. I could probably cherry pick a better paper to support your case myself.
Moreover, even if we had a good paper that corroborated what you have here, I'm sure you probably realize that it takes more than a single paper, or even a handful of papers, to declare some truth finalized. "Pretty damning." Come on, dude.
I picked it because it is someone who wasn't taught this sort of thinking, and who took a job where they didn't until recently do this sort of thinking on the main.
Yes, the paper itself isn't a turning point, but the claims of the paper, if one chooses to accept them, are damning. A science should never confuse theoretical prediction and empiric evidence.
Indeed, other agencies like the FDA make the opposite mistake e.g. insisting on endless RCTs for e.g. JJ + mRNA booster vaccine when the theory-based extrapolation from other evidence is simple, and the opportunity cost of waiting non-negligible.
It is bad and quite odd given the overall trend of science towards "mindless empiricism" that Econ has the opposite problem!
I had planned a vacation 2 years ago before the pandemic. Obviously had to shelve that. Now the price for the same ticket has increased by 2.5x
I still paid for it and justified it in my head that this is the first time I’ll be traveling in two and a half years.
But if I had to do it again, I can’t justify it at all. There has to be some level of “spite spending” from two years of pandemic as well - people who know that they’re overpaying but they do it anyway because they’ve been locked up for two years.
I'm 37 now and this idea of "collective psychology" really fascinates me. Mention age because I'm just old enough to start seeing these large-scale "shifts of mood" over my own life. In hindsight (US perspective here), I can now see how the mid/late-90s were a happy time, 9/11 was a complete "shock", optimism kicked back in around 2005 leading to the 2008 financial crisis (huge run-up in house prices, sloppy mortgage underwriting, etc), but 2008 was a bomb, and now 14 years on, the way I'd describe the last decade is "slow-burn turbulence". We know it's getting more chaotic, we see it, politics is more fragmented, but it's hard pointing to one particular event as "it" the way we could with, say, 9/11.
I mention this because I think these cycles have profound effects on economic variables like spending, credit use, etc. Your commend about "spite spending" fits perfectly with this--yes, household balance sheets are deteriorating, but people are just sick of covid, they want to take a vacation, and get outside.
I think a similar thing drove housing in the 50s, actually. It's easy to look back on the mid-century dynamic as "boring", "sterile" even, but WWII ended in the mid-40s, and if I'd spent a year of three getting blown up in Europe or Japan, a quiet house in the suburbs is exactly what I'd want.
I'm 34 and feel the same way. You can feel the zeitgeist change every 8-10 years. Its like the world has a collective consciousness (even though I largely think that's just based on the media you consume.)
I'm not saying I can predict this stuff looking forward, that's borderline impossible.
But it's more than just a feeling. Keynes was writing in the 1920s/1930s about "animal spirits" driving the business cycle. Read Ray Dalio's stuff on credit cycles. Collective psychology drives a lot of carefully measured phenomena, things like savings rates, credit growth, unemployment, etc.
I spend probably 4-6 hours/week reading professionally edited, long-form journalism. In all honesty, I'm not sure it's a great use of time, but I can tell you all about things like the UK's no confidence vote on Boris Johnson, or why the "Red wall" situation in the UK reminds me of Michigan and Pennsylvania in the US, north vs south Europe's views on the EU's 750 billion NGEU stimulus, the performance of Nordic sovereign wealth funds, or why the expiry of the US's child tax credit was catastrophic in terms of poverty reduction.
Point being, if you really immerse yourself in good news for a couple decades (I've been reading at this frequency for ~20 years), it trains you toward a healthy baseline of what's "normal" vs. exceptional.
I was talking to my wife last week, telling her that at this point, at least as it pertains to economics, I usually know what "normal" means (e.g. GDP growth, unemployment, etc), and I know what's "weird" about the present day, but what I haven't yet figured out is what stays the same over time vs. what changes. Take US interest rates. The 10-year treasury note was around 1.00% 18-24 months ago. That was low. Now it's in the 3s, which is still fairly low. What I can't figure out is whether this "lowness", which is historically bizarre, will continue this way, or if there's some permanent structural change (e.g. more elderly savers relative to young users of capital) that has permanently altered the equilibrium. That does seem pretty hard, though.
The change is that we will go through a credit lengthening process, again, as soon as we figure out that tightening, as a policy, doesn't work anymore. If I had to make a guess, I would say 9 months, at most. Why, just my guess, or it ...
The Big Mac is $9.99 for the person unwilling to download the McDonald's app and use the digital coupons. More broadly, we are very quickly entering a world of personalized pricing, and the best prices go to those willing to jump through whichever hoops sellers create. It's a K-shaped recovery, but it's also K-shaped pricing. So you're seeing more "MSRP" type pricing in places we're not used to seeing it -- kind of like how list prices for college go up and up every year, yet the net price is relatively flat [0].
Everyone has realized what colleges and "enterprise" sellers realized years ago - nobody will pay $10 for a Big Mac if you sell it for $6, but if you price it at $10 and offer even really easy coupons to get it down to $6, you will sell a decent amount of $10 Big Macs.
You are right. With that said I absolutely hate the fact that I have to load my phone with privacy invading apps for every place I shop. I go to 7-11 and they ask if I have a membership card for discounts, when I asked for one they said its an app and I have to install it...
Similar is gas pricing. 10 cents cheaper if you have the app or gas station CC.
Sure they're cheaper, but do you really want to feel like you're going to court getting on the plane, arguing over how many personal items you're allowed, their size, etc? There is in fact a limit to what many people (including me) will put up with, at some point, you just want no change fees, no baggage fees, etc and pick Southwest.
Incidentally, when people talk about schools and healthcare, and suggest a one-size-fits-all model, I'm shocked they don't see how much peoples' preferences vary. If we can have so much choice and variety when it comes to something as stupid as air travel, it seems crazy we wouldn't want the same thing in healthcare.
I am good with the Spirit model. You know exactly what you going to get and can buy what you need. It would be great if US healthcare was the same way. Clear, upfront pricing is much friendlier than handing over money for a service for which you don't know the price or extent.
I feel like they are a by-product of fare deregulation and the movement to self-directed online bookings. Like vermin before the invention of germ theory, they just appeared spontaneously on the market and nobody really planned it.
Deregulated fares eliminated the need and most of the opportunity for carriers to compete on experience. If PHX-ORD was the same price on every carrier, you're going to see all the marketing devoted to things like "nicest cabins, best food, most free amenities, most convenient schedule". That's a very hard message to maintain when 95% of customers start at a brand-neutral booking system and searches by price. I sort of wonder if they'd have succeeded in the age of agent-driven bookings, because agents would be disincentivized to recommend a carrier that's likely to yield bad reviews or loss of repeat business.
I think Southwest and JetBlue have done a moderate job of beating that cycle-- creating loyalty by promising "reliably slightly worse than awful". I know I'd preferentially book Southwest if I needed a flight just because I know I'm not going to be nickel-and-dimed with luggage fees.
Conversely, I don't think people's tastes for health care and education are as broad as you'd expect. There isn't anywhere near as much opportunity to "unbundle" features to try to hit a price target. Nobody says "well, if we can save $250 this year, let's not teach Timmy how to subtract", or "I want my surgery done by Steve, who just finished a three-week Coursera Tonsillectomy Bootcamp, rather than paying full price for Johns Hopkins."
In just about every store that lets you use a phone number you can use the “Jenny” number as someone has signed it up: (XXX) 867-5309
Either use the local area code or a common one like NY (212) or LA (213).
7-11 is the best for this as there’s tons of people using it. At one point they had a free coffee every 10 promotion so every time you buy a coffee it was a 1/10 gamble to get a free one.
"7-11 is the best for this as there’s tons of people using it. At one point they had a free coffee every 10 promotion so every time you buy a coffee it was a 1/10 gamble to get a free one."
Along these lines, during the pandemic some restaurants were using QR codes for digital menus for "safety reasons". Scanning the code would pull up a prompt to download their app, or a third-party app. Hopefully that nonsense fades away quickly, but I doubt it.
They are using the coupon data to determine how "price sensitive" consumers are. If most people do not use the coupons, the company will determine that they've set prices too low and they're leaving money on the table. If you have the means to buy the $10 big mac, please use the coupon anyways to signal that they cannot keep raising the prices.
1) They will not earn more money in the future to offset the price increases.
and
2) Their savings will outpace inflation.
Then they will react to inflation by saving more and deferring consumption. In order for this to change, saving/investment must generally be a bad deal for the average consumer - or they have to have the expectation that future earnings growth will offset inflation.
After 50 years of flat wages, it should be unsurprising that the average consumer does not believe 1 will be true.
> psychology of inflation is different than the past... It used to be that inflation fueled spending because people figured they should buy it now because it will cost more later... Today people see a Big Mac meal costs $9.99 at McDonalds and think “I can’t afford that!”
Apparently homo economicus has an interesting digestive system. Does the Econ dept have an Anatomy book explaining how folks can eat 2x this year and then not eat next year?
As glib as your comment is, the answer is that people will probably start eating at home. I'm not saying they will eat higher quality foods, but they won't be eating fast food as much. The value proposition isn't there.
I see this in my own life. I've eaten out for about 80% of my dinners. Taco Bell use to be $0.89 a taco. Now it's around $2. It took me 15 minutes round trip to get Taco Bell. My time (including fuel for the car) and food costs are now at or below $2 per taco (where I would get at least 3 for myself, two for my wife and 2 burritos betwixt us). I can eat steak and potatoes for the same total cost of a meal.
Homo economicus still has a digestive system. It's now considering the amount of energy (money) required to gather the food. Similar to the homo sapiens idea of, "Should I eat these nuts or get a pack of people to take down a bison?"
You have to keep in mind gas to get the food. Now if you stop on your way, you can call is 0 total. If you go home first, do things, then go get food, you need to include the cost of fuel.
This only strengthens my point. Going to the grocery store in nearly every household's weekly/biweekly cadence, but most people drive to go out to eat. If we include additional energy costs, the spread in inflation between food at home and food away from home is even larger.
Maybe this will help people to eat healthier. You can get a pound of deli meat and a loaf of bread for around $15 here. That makes about a week's worth of sandwiches. I certainly know I could stand to eat better.
> I think supply chain problems are taking a bite out of demand. I have wanted to buy equipment for my photography/art hobby and I can’t get it. I am saving money until it is available, not buying something else.
There's another aspect of this one..
There are people buying right now despite not being able to get their item because they're afraid it will cost much more later. Then they wait.
On the retailer's side, the responsible ones hold the money and count it as a liability (ha!) while the normal ones count it as revenue right now and spend accordingly.
The complication comes in later if that retailer goes out of business. Suddenly you're out the money and the item gets delivered to an entity that no longer exists.. and then goes to a liquidation auction getting sold for a fraction of the price to clear the retailer's debts. (Technically, you'd be on that list but so far down it doesn't matter.)
This isn't hypothetical either. If you know where to look, you can get some AMAZING deals right now.
Economic indicators tell a better story when they are not manipulated.
In particular the impact of Fed QE policies on these rates is sufficient that I would not trust them to tell a comparable story now to what they did before QE started in 2009.
Just moved into a new apt & found a broken window frame. The owner was wanting to upgrade several other windows at the same time - only to hear a six-month leadtime for new windows.
Poof. There goes (I'm guessing) $2K of window demand.
The thing is, last time inflation was this bad in the 70s and 80s, per capita income was also going up. And maybe real income was not going up, but it was somewhat blunting the full effect of inflation.
If you look at per capita income from 2019 to 2020 it actually went down. BUT we only really have 2 data points right now(2019 and 2020) so I don't think we will see a full picture until 2024 or 2025.
Personal data point, but psychologically I am definitely cutting spending on things like restaurants and groceries. I can afford that fast food meal for 20$, but I don't value it at that price, so I just don't buy it. I'm not really crying 'boo hoo inflation', I just kind of pass on it and go on about life.
> psychology of inflation is different than the past, because people have so little experience with it and don’t really believe in it.
This is called second round effect and it will come later, when people will spend and demand wage raises no matter what actual inflation rate would be then...
This is excatly what central banks are trying to avoid by cooling economy before inflation expectations got anchored and lead to inflaton spiral (in economic lingo)
Well you need to consider what treasury yields represent. They are the market response from thousands of participants with hundreds of billions of dollars of skin in the game to the question “What will you pay today for a dollar in 3 months? What will you pay today for a dollar in 10 years?”
That market consensus captures a lot of information and boils it down to its essence.
Mob wisdom and informed people betting with their money are two different things. Not saying the matter is 100% accurate, but better than what is normally called mob wisdom.
Isn't this very similar to the betting market for sports for example? The betting markets are knee jerk themselves, who know how their mindset in general changing over time, they may be becoming more short sighted and so react on yesterday's news. IMO, Just because there is money involved doesn't make it accurate.
I think you've hit the nail on the head. Also you've inadvertently proven that a pillar of objective US economic policy is the subjective experience of wealthy people.
Politicians appease the rich to keep the economy afloat. That's how it's always worked throughout history, that's how it works now, but I would argue that it must not be allowed to continue working that way in the future. Unless we want to keep waiting for a handout from the rich under trickle-down economics.
The solution to all of this of course is to examine the opposite choices that were available to us at any point in the last 40+ years. Some low-hanging fruit is stuff like Who Killed the Electric Car, or when Bill Clinton caved to Newt Gingrich and dismantled social programs and let the The Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act happen which created/exacerbated these 10 years boom-bust cycles, or when Ronald Reagan took Jimmy Carter's solar panels off the white house and set renewable energy in the US back 30+ years, or when we kept Cold War military spending levels after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, just on and on and on and on and on. An infinitude of unforced errors which ran up a bill that Gen X and younger now has to pay.
That was a bit of a rant sorry, but I almost can't believe we're talking about yield curves when a modest 3 bedroom home costs half a million dollars and working people are making $15/hr if they're lucky. If I were a young person today listening to an older person gaslight me that nobody wants to work, I mean, I don't see how I could do anything but laugh at them. Just outright laugh at that level of cognitive dissonance.
there's a 1k sqft house in my neighborhood renting for $6,500/month, I live in Dallas TX. That is the clearest indication of economic insanity i have ever seen.
As another data scientist I find that sentiment baffling. Everything I build is a lot of complexity nuancing some otherwise simple trends that do 80% of the work.
> as a data scientist, these models always seem way too simple to me to actually predict anything about the economy
Well, yes. The Fed doesn't look at one metric and then move rates any more than a rates trader. This is one among many inputs into a variety of models, most of which vastly outclass 90% of data science I've seen in the wild. (No insult there. If an ad-targeting algorithm is more complicated than a model of the American economy, we've got a problem, and we're not that far from it.)
The US treasury yield curve is not a predictive model.
It’s a fundamental component of the global economy. It is in the “ground truth” for market demand and supply for cash flows across time horizons, at a point in time.
This is probably because the economist who first looked into relationship between the yield curve and recessions used 10y-3m [0]. His reasoning is that the 3m gives a better outlook of the conditions happening at the moment than the 2y.
There's a conspiracy theory going around that the overreaction to Covid was because people wanted to hide how rough things were going to be economically.
It's a big topic. But 5/12 false positives tells you nothing about accuracy. You also need to measure the number of true negatives and false negatives and what not. Accuracy tends to be worthless for most use cases when the event being predicted is rare. If you're predicting a 1 in a million event always predicting NO gives you a 99.9999% accurate model.
Many medical tests are 99%+ accurate, but the false positive rate, meaning the probability that you don't have the disease given a false positive test is still extremely high. Like 90%+. Bayes law fucks us all.
Medical tests are often designed that way. For example cheap/quick hiv tests have a low false negative and a high false positive. They are still useful, you filter out most people safely and the ones with a positive test can take a more expensive test to check.
Yes, but also no. If your test only flags a false positive 1 in a million times, searching for a disease that affects 1 in 100 million people, you'll get a ratio of 100:1 false positives. Still very useful as you explain, but I think it's misleading to imply that's what they're aspiring to. It's hard to make a test that never returns false positives.
I don’t disagree with you, merely said that for some reason it was possible to make a cheaper and quicker HIV test that has a high false positive and a low false negative.
I have myself tested positive twice without actually being positive when being deployed with the army, so agree on all your points that this is not great and not an intended goal,. Just what we get when we try to make the cheapest possible test today.
Probability of recession ('how often do you check?' question aside) is fairly low. If you can guess what specific number comes up on a dice roll 50% of the time, you're good at predicting dice rolls.
> does that not make it roughly equivalent to a coin flip?
No.
Intuition: predicting the outcome of a coin flip correctly 50% of the time is unimpressive, but predicting the outcome of a D20 dice roll correctly 50% of the time is incredibly impressive.
It's not binary, it's "is the recession going to happen in the next few months/years", so the prediction is a number. More like D20 in one of the neighbour threads. But not necessarily a D20, could be a D6 so less impressive.
Over thousands of periods. And each time the prediction was no the outcome was no, and among the few times the predictions was yes it happened 50% of the time.
Recessions are forecast on a quarterly basis, so not thousands, but more than 20 between each recession (typically, historically). That's why I chose a D20 -- out of coin/dice/D6/D20/Roulette, it's the RNG that's most reasonably close to the number of quarters between recessions.
How long have we been forecasting? More than 50 years or more than 200 quarters. 5/12 would be 7 misses out of 200, that means it was right 193 out of 200 times.
That doesn't include false negatives of course. Actuals vs positive predictions tells you nothing interesting.
Yeah there are many additional reasons this is different from a coin clip, but the confusion of predicting correctly 50% of the time in a 50/50 event versus 50% of the time for a 1/20+ event was the most glaring issue so I started with that one...
The sides of the dice are financial quarters. The roll is the financial quarter that a recession starts.
If recessions happened every other financial quarter then the outcome would be binary. But historically recessions not that common; they happen in less than 1 in 20 financial quarters. So the D20 analogy is actually something of an understatement.
It’s binary, but not balanced. Specifically, it’s predicting the beginning of a recession, and very few time periods are the beginning of a recession.
So it’s like predicting that you’ll roll a 1 on a die. Flipping a coin for your prediction would say you’ll roll the 1 50% of the time, which is obviously wrong.
"Precision" is the right word, that's the probability that you identified a recession but there wasn't a recession.
You can get very high accuracy (more like 95%) by predicting that there will not be a recession because recessions are less common than expansions.
An indicator that flashes occasionally but it even if it wrong half of the time (you do the coin flip after the warning) it is giving useful information about an unusual event.
it's a _necessary_ but _not sufficient_ condition for a recession. so it does provide you information. if the yield curve does not invert, it is unlikely there will be a recession.
What type of bet you make with the market matters a lot. If your play is very convex and it gives you the opportunity to risk $1 to make $10 then that's a worthwhile bet to make provided that losing $1 10 times doesn't wipe you out. Since market crashes tend to be violent and volatile there are instruments out there that benefit from higher volatility and can give you 100x returns.
So when you combine a 5/12 accuracy indicator with a play that is low probability, little fee to entry, but huge reward you have a decent strategy.
Only if the probability of the true positive is 50%. If I had a model that told me with 50% certainty that a black swan event was about to occur, that would be pretty valuable.
One thing that make that statement less impactful is that we now have tools to prevent recessions. So maybe in those five a recession were coming but correct action was taken and it was all good.
"In economics a prediction itself can alter the object of the prediction. Hence, for certain kinds of ecomomic phenomenon, forecasting can be a logical impossibility." - Kaushik Basu.
I think recession definitely falls under this category. And calling out a recession while we are already in it is not really a prediction.
> We seem to be pulling all possible levers and are still barreling into a recession at full speed.
The Fed is pulling fairly hard (but far from maximally hard, because there is considerable concern about policy overshoot) on the anti-inflation monetary policy levers. Those are also the ones that cause, rather than fight, recessions. They are doing this because pulling hard on the anti-recession levers due to the hard and fast COVID recession lead to an equally hard and fast rebound with skyrocketing inflation.
Congress is basically sitting on its hands on major fiscal policy levers, having returned to a basic neutral stance after fairly heavy anti-recession stimulus during the COVID recession. (If we really wanted to manage inflation while avoiding recession, we’d probably want Congress taking more targeted anti-inflation fiscal action aimed at the specific sectors driving overall inflation, so that the Fed could take a lighter hand on broad-focus anti-stimulative measures; if we just wanted to avoid recession in the near term period, we’d focus on stimulus and damn the torpedoes of inflation; but I don't think that would be wise.)
We are very, very far from pulling all possible levers to prevent a recession.
The solution is austerity, but no one wants to cut spending and risk losing votes. Large spending packages contributed to inflation and were partly a calculated giveaway by both parties.
Recessions are built into the system. They eliminate market inefficiencies and are the culling element in a system designed to efficiently allocate capital. They are small bush fires that cause minor damage but are ultimately healthy for the forest.
Without recessions credit risk becomes meaningless and is never tested - everything is endlessly going up so there is no leverage risk. People take on progressively riskier bets, zombie companies survive on loans, asset prices increase beyond reason because "you can't lose".
The system is incapable of monotonic growth and market intervention to take the sting out of recessions means the trees burn down not just the underbrush.
This is one of the most inane things I've read on HN in years, and that is a lot of competition.
Bush fires happening in forests throughout history happened due to lighting strikes and what have you, at least before modern times. Random natural events. Economic activity is a considered, thought out socialized activity - the central societal activity.
You're advocating the necessity of unnecessary problems due to other unnecessary problems - recessions are needed due to market inefficiencies, misallocated capital (cryptocurrency companies?), risky credit, leverage risk, riskier bets, zombie companies survive on loans, asset prices increase beyond reason, and a system incapable of monotonous growth. Your cure for this is all the maladies of a recession - higher unemployment, GDP actually shrinking etc. You list out many of the maladies of the current state of the relations of production and your solution is more maladies. This thinking is at best insular, unimaginative, limited and provincial. It is only tautological within a very limited view, where your solution for all the maladies you list out is self inflicting the malady of negative GDP growth and the maladies surrounding that.
We have nothing that didn't exist in 2001 or 2008 or 2020.
It is kind of weird to see Millennials whose economic awareness starts roughly in 2008 think that economics is fundamentally different now than it was 20 years ago.
There is something fundamentally different now than 2009-2020 -- but it is that the Boomers are retiring, COVID took people out of the workforce, and reduced immigration means that there's now fewer job seekers than jobs. This is causing sticky wage increases that have policymakers worried. They want to keep workers in check and contain wage inflation, so will throw on the brakes. The levers that they have are crude and the only real way to do this is to create pain which drops the number of job openings.
The current commodities inflation surge isn't even that out of line with the past. We had higher oil prices in 2008 before the bust, we also had similar prices, particularly on an inflation-adjusted basis in 2014 at the height of the last commodities boom (which did not end with a recession). And the current commodities boom is clearly associated with the pandemic. Two years ago we had negative oil prices. It is wild to see all the people in this thread not understanding the cyclical nature of commodities prices and the very clear bullwhip effects that are unfolding right now.
I've been predicting that since everyone expects inflation that just on contrarian logic alone the bulk of the people have to be wrong and that we're due for a strong recessionary crash / depression. That logic seems to keep on getting better. The fact that people believe the Fed can land the economy softly, without a recession, and get inflation under control is also pretty wild though.
I think you are putting a lot of emphasis on the word now and assuming I’ma lot younger than you.
Anyway, can they feed fight inflation and avoid a recession? Who knows but it seems if they have to choose they are choosing a recession. A string crash/recession definitely seems like a real possibility.
There are absolutely no available tools to prevent recessions. There are tools to a) blunt the trauma while in a recession or b) kick the can down the road. Recessions are an integral part of the business cycle. Saying we have tools to prevent a recession is like saying we have drugs to prevent you from going to the bathroom.
Preventing a recession would imply that one can see into the future and accurately predict when the next one will happen. This isn’t like watching someone about to get hit by a car and then saving their life by pushing them to safety.
Even if you did have hypothetical tools to do so, how would you know you prevented one anyways?
Let’s separate the two first. Clearly we can move the start date for recession by changing interest rates and pumping money into the economy. I think you agree on this? If so that would mess with predictions which is what I said.
Can recessions be prevented. I think it is believed they can. The theory is juice the economy on hard times and pump the brakes in good times. This the depends on two things, ability to know what is good and bad times which I personally depends to some extent on predicting the future. I think it also depends on being able to use the brakes in good times which we did not do, the Trump tax cuts clearly should not have happened if this was the goal.
So even though I believe in the Keynesian model I agree with you that it might not work in practice. But it is mostly working right now, although clearly not 100%.
But I think the evidence is quite clear that the timing and severity of a recession can be influenced by monetary policy, and if you agree with that you probably agree that predictions of recession are not going to work 100% even if there was a clear way of predicting them.
I’m a bit confused, when would we be in hard times but not in a recession? During the summer of 2020 we were already in a recession, and in response the stimulus and pumping was done. This is on top of the fact that not only are we not able to predict recessions accurately, we usually don’t even know we are in one until we are 3-6 months into it.
“It is believed they can”…by who? Other than you of course.
The severity of a recession is determined by what is done in the early days of the recession, not before.
> The classic joke about this is that the inverted yield curve has predicted 12 of the last 7 recessions.
That is not the classic joke.
First off, inverted yield curves has accurately predicted recessions without false positives. Look up Campbell R. Harvey, who first published on this phenomenon in his dissertation:
Its record is 7 for 7, with no false signals, using data since 1950. Of course people weren't looking at it closely until post-2008, so now it could (as mentioned in the interview @4m50s) become part of a feedback mechanism.
Second, the actual joke by economist Paul Samuelson (who wrote "the" textbook on economics) was about Wall Street:
> To prove that Wall Street is an early omen of movements still to come in GNP, commentators quote economic studies alleging that market downturns predicted four out of the last five recessions. That is an understatement. Wall Street indexes predicted nine out of the last five recessions! And its mistakes were beauties.[18]
You should read more about the yield curve or the bond market in general, it is a pretty clever beast.
More immediately to this thread - the 3m yield will most likely soon become what is currently the 1-2yr yield, and that without changes in the 10yr yield will close the 3m 10y spread.
Many are saying there is no recession now or coming soon and point to various figures to prove it... This ignores deep structural problems that have been covered up by QE. QE itself was a cook the books kind of scenario to provide liquidity... Then it became impossible to roll it back once companies and the market got addicted to the money.
So now we approach a point where tightening has to happen because both the Federal Reserve and U.S. Govt have run up the balance sheets and debts to very high insane levels not meant for "peace time".
Now as they attempt to roll it back, certain issues start to appear. First due to lots of factors... main one likely being generational bretton woods style changes to the global economy and the reserve currency used. The only argument against this is that China, Russia and maybe most of OPEC moving away from using dollars to handle various transactions tends to cause certain unexpected issues while that is happening.
One of those is inflation since for mant years it has been one of the United States main exports...
So while all of this is rolled back or changed, it reveals all of the existing structural problems that were never really addressed...
All of these factors either mean a big crash or a controlled demolition of the whole QE system and a global reordering of trade.
There are far too many factors to control and many more are not controllable. So expect a crash.
To determine when this is likely, maybe watch the repo and reverse repo market rates. Since 2020 they have increased steadily, now in trillions of overnight funding needed, and continuing to grow. This could quickly lead to something not often discussed where the Federal Reserve loses the ability to control interest rates.
It is kind of a paradox, balance sheet growth -> liquidity -> inflation -> higher borrowing costs -> more balance sheet growth.. This process cant go on forever...
Many metrics exist to watch it but the idea that the Govt will one day say OK we cant fund repos tonight, everything financially will be locked up by morning... like 2008 but worse..
Oh! One last thought because I might get disappeared soon, that Paul Volcker guy had a lot of good ideas that they tried and failed to implement since 2008. Maybe those will deserve a second look, once all of this is over. Point being, nothing was fixed since the 2008 crash and as soon as the free money runs out, it will be obvious.
Also, inflation kills democracies more often than anything else.
I psychology of inflation is different than the past, because people have so little experience with it and don’t really believe in it.
It used to be that inflation fueled spending because people figured they should buy it now because it will cost more later. They’d figure there is no point in saving because the value of money will get eroded.
Today people see a Big Mac meal costs $9.99 at McDonalds and think “I can’t afford that!”, gas is $4.99, diesel is close to $7 and people think they have to stop the bleeding by hitting the brakes on consumption.
I think supply chain problems are taking a bite out of demand. I have wanted to buy equipment for my photography/art hobby and I can’t get it. I am saving money until it is available, not buying something else.
reply