Economic Events on November 7, 2011

At 3:00 PM Eastern time, the Consumer Credit report for September will be released.  The consensus estimate is that there will be an increase of $5.0 billion in the consumer credit available in September, after a decrease of $9.5 billion in the previous month.

Join the forum discussion on this post - (1) Posts

What the 'Long Tail' used to refer to

More back to the future in a way.  Income, poverty and general distribution issues used to be bigger topics in both academic research as well as the media and public discourse.  I once had a whole class just in how to measure poverty.  Seems to be a resurgence in the whole topic.

American Community Survey income distribution for households in the Pittsburgh MSA looks like this:

HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS (IN 2010 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)

Universe: Households

2010 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates

Pittsburgh, PA Metro Area
Estimate Margin of Error
Total: 978,959 +/-8,063
Less than $10,000 75,445 +/-4,207
$10,000 to $14,999 60,079 +/-3,254
$15,000 to $19,999 62,736 +/-3,285
$20,000 to $24,999 65,678 +/-3,660
$25,000 to $29,999 55,960 +/-3,892
$30,000 to $34,999 58,099 +/-3,570
$35,000 to $39,999 47,868 +/-2,885
$40,000 to $44,999 48,436 +/-2,846
$45,000 to $49,999 41,672 +/-3,031
$50,000 to $59,999 83,244 +/-4,605
$60,000 to $74,999 100,043 +/-4,547
$75,000 to $99,999 115,755 +/-5,690
$100,000 to $124,999 67,399 +/-3,740
$125,000 to $149,999 33,898 +/-2,113
$150,000 to $199,999 32,787 +/-2,388
$200,000 or more 29,860 +/-2,590

`The Quest' by Daniel Yergin: A great job but we need more

I recently read Daniel Yergin’s fascinating book The Quest. It’s a panoramic view of the global energy industry. For me personally, many parts were familiar territory. But many parts were new to me, and the overall integration of the story was valuable. I encourage every non-specialist (like me) who is curious about energy to read the book.

But I was left thirsty for two more books.

The first book would be a more technical treatment of the same material.

I repeatedly found myself wanting more technical detail. The pollution from cars has come down by 99% between 1970 and 2010. How was this done!? New nuclear reactor designs are fundamentally safer than the reactors that got into trouble at Chernobyl or Fukushima. What are these designs and why are they fundamentally safer!? Hybrid cars give you much higher mileage than ordinary cars. What are the key innovations which make this possible and how much did each of these new ideas contribute? The oil industry is doing incredible things digging deep into the sea. What are these engineering challenges and how are they being overcome?

And so on. The Quest is a good book but the The Quest for Geeks which would be a great book.

The second direction in which I was curious and unsatisfied was India. The book has roughly nothing about India. It talks a bit about about Suzlon and has some political stories about India’s views in global climate negotiations. For the rest, there is nothing about India’s energy industry. It would be great if a comparable panoramic treatment was done, focusing on India. Perhaps Girish Sant and/or Rangan Banerjee should embark on such a project.

Weekly Jobless Claims Break Below 400,000

Jobless claims continue to come down and this week initial claims fell 9,000 to 397,000. The four-week average is now also approaching the 400,000 level, down 2,000 in the week to 404,500. This level is more than 10,000 lower than the month-ago comparison and offers a positive indication for the October employment report to be released on Friday.

The report comes on the heals of an ADP report release Wednesday that showed October private payrolls rose 110,000 six digit growth that mirrored September’s growth of 116,000.

The Wednesday Challenger Job-Cut Report also showed corporate layoff rates to be significantly subdued.

The doomsters have long pointed to a jobless claims level of 400,000 as the mark that indicates robust hiring is on the way… of course don’t look for the perma-pessimists to change their tune even though the recovery has now produced this number.

The is no doubt however that if the jobless claims levels continue their current trends, that both private and government payroll nets will continue their healthy rise.

Join the forum discussion on this post - (1) Posts

Economic Events on November 4, 2011

The Monster Employment Index for October was released today, and the index moved up 3 points from last month to a value of 151, which is 11% higher than last October’s value.

At 8:30 AM EDT, the Employment Situation report for October will be announced, and the consensus for non-farm payrolls is an increase of 90,000 jobs compared to 103,000 in the previous month, the consensus for the unemployment rate is that it will remain at 9.1%, the consensus average hourly earnings rate is expected to increase 0.2%, and the consensus for the average workweek is 34.3 hours.

Join the forum discussion on this post - (1) Posts

Chris Martenson: Peak Oil Could Limit Economic Growth

Chris Martenson Exponential debt increases coupled with limited natural resources mean that we are in a predicament. This is the message The Crash Course Author Chris Martenson delivered at the Casey Research/Sprott Inc. summit, “When Money Dies.” As an economic researcher, Chris considers the “Three E’s” that shape our future: Economy, Energy and the Environment. In the below presentation, “Unfixable,” Chris explains to Energy Report readers why these indicators suggest a global economic slowdown. Read on.

The next 20 years are going to be completely unlike the last two decades. How the world works, how stocks grow, the very nature of investing and how our economy functions—all of these are due for fundamental, earth-shaking change. As investors, we have to adjust the way we look at the world.

We want growth. We need economic growth. It’s all you hear about when the treasury secretary talks about how we are going to get the economy growing again or when the president talks about jobs. When our money system is growing, things are reasonably happy. When it is not growing, things are very unhappy. As long as everything is growing, our economy functions reasonably well. And when it stops growing, it throws giant fits and gets into trouble. That is why we are always chasing growth. And there is a reason for that: Money. But what is money?

I don’t care what color it is or whose picture is on it or what counterfeiting measures you have in place. All money in the world today shares one characteristic: it is loaned into existence. It seems like a simple enough statement, but this has enormous implications. Because it is borrowed, we pay interest on it. That interest drives a peculiar feature in our money system (by “our” I’m referring to all fiat currencies in the world because all of them operate by this same loaning principle). When you loan money into existence, you have to pay both the principal and the interest back. That means there is always more debt than money in the system.

We are constantly growing our money supply because our population is growing. In the past, we had a seemingly endless supply of resources, energy and land to occupy—all of that has been OK. But we are coming to a point where it’s not OK anymore.

mortenson

Consider a chart of total credit market debt. It tops out at about $52 trillion (T). Each of those big, blue, upside-down triangles mark a doubling of credit market debt. From 1970 to about 1977, total credit market debt doubled. It doubled again by 1983. Then it doubled again and again and again. Over four decades, we had five doublings of our credit market debt. In order for the next 20 years to look like the last 20 years, we would need two complete doublings of credit market debt. Let me put those numbers in: $52T to $104T to $208T. That is an absolutely obscene amount of credit growth. This is not how our economy is supposed to function. It was a result of the abandonment of the gold standard, and it is not sustainable.

The second thing I want to point out is the blue line. That is a curve fit. It is an attempt to mathematically model what is going on with that red credit market debt line. It shows that our money system, our credit system, has been growing nearly perfectly exponentially.

Debt:GDP Explosion

Another way to evaluate the economy is by looking at the debt:GDP ratio, because if you have a lot of income, it is OK to have a lot of debt: GDP is our income. Something really unusual is happening: The ratio is skyrocketing in an unprecedented range, with the exception of a blip during the Great Depression when manufacturing dived. We are in the middle of a very interesting experiment in this country. We can’t dig through the data series and say, “Oh, the last time we did that, this is how it turned out.” We don’t have any historical examples of any country in history getting out from under a debt:GDP load this high without going through some kind of a massive currency adjustment. There is one example from 1815 to 1900 where England got out from under 260% debt:GDP load, and it did that by cutting war spending after the Napoleonic Wars with help from the Industrial Revolution. Nothing on our horizon indicates that we are going to cut spending or increase our overall economic output by huge amounts. So we have to ask the question: How do we get out from under that? This debt:GDP imbalance is a global phenomenon. It is not just a U.S. problem.

That is why the economy must grow. In order to be happy, in order to service those debt loads, it must grow. Exponential growth, the kind that starts out nice and easy in a linear fashion and then shoots up suddenly, is what I am really worried about. It is everywhere. Human population grew rather sedately for a long period of time and, recently really accelerated. Oil consumption has increased on the same model. Starting in the early 1940s, it really turned up. The more we produce, the more we use. The same is true on the environmental side; water use, forest loss, species extinction, fisheries exploited—all of this turned up aggressively in in the 1940s and 1950s. We could look at miles of roads paved, numbers of McDonald’s hamburgers served; it doesn’t matter. We are surrounded by all of these nonlinear, very J-shaped curves. This is really critical if you believe in boundaries. There is only so much arable land. There is a limit to how much water is in an aquifer. There is a limit to how much oil is in the ground. We can argue about whether we are close to those limits, but we can’t argue about the fact that the limits exist. So we need to understand how we are using these things.

I like to use a thought exercise to explain exponential growth. I have this magic eyedropper. A drop of water from this thing is going to double every minute. So one drop will become two drops in one minute. In another minute it will be four drops. After about six minutes, it will be enough to fill a thimble. If we started this experiment at noon on the pitcher’s mound of Yankee Stadium and you are handcuffed to the highest row of the bleacher seats, how long would you have to escape from your handcuffs? By 12:50 that same day, the park would be completely overrun with water. In fact, at 12:45 this is still 97% empty space with a little water in the infield. You have 45 minutes to sort of fool around, but the next five minutes are critical. That is the power of exponential increases. If you have that sense that world events are speeding up, you are right. They absolutely are.

A Peak Problem

Dating back three million years from the australopithecine humanoid precursors to 1960, we put 3 billion people on the planet. It took 40 years for the next 3 billion to arrive. Someone who is 22 years old today has been alive when half of all the oil in the world that has ever been burned has been burned. We are burning oil at roughly 2–3% more per year than when we were in a healthy economy. This is a predicament.

Do you know the difference between a problem and a predicament? A problem has solutions. A predicament has inevitable outcomes that have to be managed. If you are in a predicament seeking solutions, you are wasting time. A lot of our efforts at the national level right now are centered around seeking solutions to predicaments. That concerns me greatly because it means we are actually wasting our time, wasting resources and not looking at things the right way.

Our predicament right now concerns energy. U.S. oil production peaked in 1970 and has never returned to its former days of glory—and it never will. As a result, we import two-thirds of our liquid petroleum needs to run our society. No matter how much we drill at this point, there is absolutely no chance that we are going to return to our former production highs. In fact, out of the 54 oil-producing countries, we have about 45 that have gone past peak. No country has ever managed to get back to a former peak and exceed it.

World Discovery by Decade

mortensonSource: Chris Martenson

The peak year for oil discover was 1964. The green in the chart represents history. The red is projections for what we think we might find going forward. There could be some wiggle room, but I think it would be a stretch to think that we are ever going to get back to that peak that we saw in the 1960s.

Here is the thing about oil: If you want to produce it, you have to find it. Our finds were 40 years ago. Interesting fact: The U.S. peaked in its domestic discoveries in 1930 and hit a production peak in 1970, a 40-year gap. World oil discovery peaked in 1964 and world oil production for conventional oil peaked in 2005, 41 years after its find peak. It has not yet been exceeded. It might, but it hasn’t, even though oil prices have tripled. If there is ever an incentive to get your oil out of the ground, it’s when prices triple. That’s what market theory tells us. Somehow, we haven’t done it.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration issued a shocking statement in its 2008 World Energy Outlook. It said that oil from currently producing fields peaked in 2006. It factored in natural gas, non-conventional oil and crude oil yet to be found and developed as possibilities for filling the country’s growing energy needs. The problem is that in order to get energy out of the ground, you have to put energy into the equation. If we take a barrel to find a barrel, then all we are doing is using energy to go explore and get energy out of the ground—there is none left over to go into our gas tanks. There is none left over to grow food, or for anything else. By the time you are using one barrel to find one barrel, you are spinning your wheels.

The same lopsided equation is operational in shale beds. If we decide to switch to natural gas, we will need to retrofit our cars, build filling stations and pipelines. This will take a lot of money and about 10 or 20 years to build out. There are going to be companies that make a lot of money aggressively attempting to expand into that, but we are already behind the eight ball.

When we first started drilling for oil in the 1930s, we were getting 100:1 returns from these little wooden drilling derricks going down maybe 1,000 ft, hitting spindletop. At that point we were putting in one barrel and getting 100 back. In the ’70s, we were getting maybe 25:1 back. In the 1990s, we were getting 18:1 or even 10:1. We were drilling deeper, more remotely. The substance was a little heavier, and more sour. We went after the good stuff first: light, sweet and near the surface. Now, we are drilling in a deep ocean environment. Some of our efforts are down to 3:1. Ethanol will make it even worse. As we fall down this energy cliff and get progressively less and less energy back for our efforts, the amount of energy available to us to run our economy drops rather precipitously.

Natural Erosion

This same dynamic impacts natural resources. Some 150 years ago, we found giant nuggets of copper the size of cars sitting in streambeds. Eventually we went after smaller nuggets. Then we went after copper ore grades of 10%. Now we have huge open-pit mines with ore grades of 0.2%. Regardless of whether copper is $4/lb or $3.50/lb or $35/lb, think about the energy required to take 500 lb of copper ore from the bottom of that pit, haul it up a quarter mile, run it through a crushing machine, smelt and refine it to get that 1 lb of copper out. Would we be doing that if we didn’t have liquid fuels, if we didn’t have diesel to run big trucks? I think the answer is no. And this is after just 150 years. What happens over the next 150 years? How about in 500 years? If we continue to deplete all of our mineral reserves at 2% growth in extraction per year, which has been our 40-year historical run, how long will they last? We might find more, but sources will be more remote, further away from infrastructure needed to extract them, refine them and move them to market. The end product will be more diluted and lower quality, with deeper costs attached.

We have a world where we will face exponentially rising costs if we continue to run our economy in the way it has been running. That is not a great strategy at this point. Our economy must grow by design because of how our money and debt systems operate, but it is connected to an energy system that can’t grow. This is the definition of a predicament. No matter what policies we pursue or how clever our technologies get, there are certain things that we just can’t undo. When you take oil out of the ground and you burn it, it is gone. And we are burning it up at a faster and faster pace.

Coming to terms with this reality has actually been a fairly liberating idea for me. It has allowed me to understand what is important in my life. And it has been very helpful in my overall investing philosophy. Even though it is not a terribly uplifting story for a lot of people at first, I do think that it helps to clarify where we are in the story and what is happening.

This was a summary of Chris Martenson’s presentation. For the complete audio collection of the Casey Research/Sprott Inc. Summit “When Money Dies,” click here.

Chris Martenson is a scientist, financial and economic analyst and writer at www.ChrisMartenson.com. He earned his MBA at Cornell University and a Ph.D. from Duke University. As one of the early econobloggers who forecast the housing market collapse and stock market correction years in advance, he launched a video seminar and later published a book entitled The Crash Course. To learn more about Chris and his work, including the Crash Course, go to chrismartenson.com.

Indirect Revenue

I’ve been writing quite a bit recently on indirect taxation, and I thought that I would take a minute to look at things from the opposite side of the fence as it were. First, some context for my thoughts:

The state of Connecticut passed a new Internet tax law and contends that Amazon had a physical presence because it had affiliations with websites through its Amazon Associates program. Of course, Amazon dropped the Associates program in Connecticut to avoid having to collect the sales tax or fight that contention. In fact, the same scenario took place in California this year – so Amazon dropped its California Associates program to opt of that government scheme. The headhunting tax thieves from so many states are so focused on getting Amazon, this has come to be known as the “Amazon Tax.” Theft-seeking bureaucrats are fond of supporting their schemes as a logical move to combat an “unfair advantage” that they say online retailers have over brick-and-mortar retailers.

Many people generally only think about the direct taxes they pay when considering alternative tax policies (this being, of course, a form of the broken window fallacy). The same mindset is found in bureaucrats who, contrary to popular belief, are actually human.

Bureaucrats get excited about finding new ways to increase tax revenue, as was seen above with Amazon. They found a new way to charge taxes, or so they thought. There models assumed that Amazon would simply comply because they would not want to forego the extra profits found by selling through their associates in that state. Unfortunately, Amazon’s margins are pretty thin. So thin that, as Karl Denninger has observed, collecting sales tax will kill their competitive advantage. Thus, not having any business sense or, apparently, access to financial reports, Connecticut decided to charge Amazon sales tax because it had associates in the state. Amazon cut ties in order to avoid paying taxes.

As is readily obvious, Connecticut won’t be seeing the increase in tax revenue it’s expecting. But they should also see a drop in revenue from the income tax because associates are now not earning anything from being associates, and will therefore pay less. Some may even move out of state if being an associate was their main job in order to recoup their lost income. There should also be negative repercussions on sales tax revenue, since former associates will likely spend less money. Astute readers will note that this is basically the money multiplier effect being negatively applied to taxes.

What’s astonishing is a) how bureaucrats thought there was not a single chance that Amazon wouldn’t pay the new tax and b) how bureaucrats failed to account for the possibility of Amazon dropping the program. Quite simply, it is amazing how bureaucrats apparently did not even contemplate how their tax policy has indirect effects on other tax revenue. Their stupidity is simply astonishing.

Pakistan, India, MFN: What are the implications?

For once, I am pleased at how India played it: India gave Pakistan MFN status way back, in 1996, without getting into the silliness of reciprocity. A hallmark of professional competence in international trade is the idea of unilateral liberalisation: Even if another country is silly enough to have barriers against us, we should not have trade barriers against them. Removing barriers against India’s globalisation is a favour to us, regardless of what it does to anyone else. India often gets into cul de sacs by obsessing on reciprocity – e.g. we won’t open up to imports of agricultural products because the Europeans won’t. We won’t allow foreign banks to operate in India because some other countries have barriers against the operations of Indian banks. And so on. But for once, in this case, our guys seem to have played it right (and way back in 1996, too!).

And now, we have a nice next step: Pakistan will give India MFN status. What might happen next? Here are some conjectures:

  1. At present, there is significant Indo-Pak trade; it merely gets routed through Dubai. Once Pakistan gives India MFN status, the entrepot trade that was going Bombay -> Dubai -> Karachi will go Bombay -> Karachi. This is bad news for Dubai and for individuals and firms which are invested in the future of Dubai as an entrepot centre. Trade data should show a fairly sharp decline in India’s exports to UAE and a fairly sharp rise in India’s exports to Pakistan.
  2. There will be a boom in shipping, communication and trade serving the direct Bombay -> Karachi route. Similarly, the ports of Gujarat will do a lot of business directly to Karachi.
  3. At first blush, little changes: the goods that used to go via Dubai would now go directly to Karachi. But a recurring theme in economics is the extent to which apparently small frictions loom large. The removal of fairly modest frictions matters a lot for business activity. So when the cost of shipping goes down by roughly 3x, even though the cost of shipping may be small in absolute terms, this would have a big impact on trade. Another dimension of cost is the cost of the middleman in Dubai. The establishment cost of this middleman in Dubai would be eliminated.
  4. Important dynamics will now set in amidst firms in Pakistan. Firms that compete with exports from India will suffer. Firms that consume imported inputs from India will thrive. Creative destruction will take place; resources will shift from one group of firms to another. Exporters will be better able to export to India, both because of access to cheaper labour and capital that’s freed up by firms that die owing to import competition, and because of improved competitiveness that comes from cheaper raw materials. Exports from Pakistan to India will go up significantly.
  5. Large Indian and Pakistani corporations will look much more seriously at the opportunities that lie just beyond the national border. Over time, human capacities and human networks will build up on both sides, supporting cross-border operations. This will take time to ripen, but when it does, the effects will be large. A huge fraction of global trade is intra-firm trade, so it’s very important to have large firms of both countries having operations in both countries, in order to get growth of trade.
  6. The biggest gains in India will be in Gujarat, given the myriad ports in Gujarat which are a short distance away from Pakistan. But in the future, if road and rail links open up, then there are big opportunities in Punjab also. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a NHAI style road running from Ahmedabad to Karachi, and from Amritsar to Lahore?
To the extent that we’re merely rerouting trade, bypassing Dubai, this will impose no new stress on ports and airports in Pakistan. But to the extent that new trade is created – as I expect it will (and as argued above) – then new work will be required in Pakistan on enhancing the capacity of ports and airports. I would personally be surprised if the effects are not large.
In the intuition of economists, there is a gravity model in the affairs of men. Proximity and low transactions costs are incredibly important. The natural opportunity for India to grow international integration on all dimensions (goods, services, people, ideas, capital) lies in our immediate neighbourhood. India’s connections into the region are shockingly below those seen for all other large countries. Doing better on connections with Pakistan would be a nice step forward.
Consider a product like cement, which is ordinarily considered a non-tradeable. Transportation of cement is so hard, there isn’t a unified national market in India. There are a series of regional markets. But even in this, modifications of transportation have mattered greatly. E.g. when Gujarat Ambuja came up with the innovation (back in the mid 1990s) of sending cement from Saurashtra to Bombay, by sea, this was a very big deal. By that same logic, cement from the coast of Saurashtra can go to Pakistan (or vice versa, depending on who produces at a lower price).
We should not see trade in goods in isolation. All dimensions of globalisation are intimately connected to each other. To do more trade in goods and services, we need more movement of people. Ergo, the silly visa restrictions that both countries impose on each other need to be eased. Finance follows trade: So where trade in goods and services leads the way, bigger financial integration will inevitably follow with trade financing, cross-border banking, payments, purchases of information, operations of multinationals and FDI, INR/PKR currency risk management, and investment flows. More will need to be done on investment guarantees, export/import trade financing, etc.
Join the forum discussion on this post - (1) Posts

Economic Events on November 3, 2011

The monthly Chain Store Sales report will be released today.  This report on sales in chain stores gives a look at the health of stores that make up about 10% of all retail sales.

At 8:30 AM EDT, the U.S. government will release its weekly Jobless Claims report. The consensus is that there were 400,000 new jobless claims last week, which would would be 2,000 less than the previous week.

Also at 8:30 AM EDT, the Productivity and Costs report for the third quarter of 2011 will be released.  The consensus is that non-farm productivity increased by 2.5% in the last quarter and labor unit costs decreased 0.7%.

At 9:45 AM EDT, the weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index will be released, providing an update on Americans’ views of the U.S. economy, their personal finances and the buying climate.

At 10:00 AM EDT, the Factory Orders report for September will be released.  The consensus is that there was a decrease of 0.2% in orders from the previous month.

Also at 10:00 AM EDT, the ISM non-manufacturing index for October will be released.  The consensus estimate is that increased by 0.5 points to a value of 53.5, and will continue to signal economic growth as it remains above the mid-point of 50.

At 10:30 AM EDT, the weekly Energy Information Administration Natural Gas Report will be released, giving an update on natural gas inventories in the United States.

At 4:30 PM EDT, the Federal Reserve will release its Money Supply report, showing the amount of liquidity available in the U.S. economy.

Also at 4:30 PM EDT, the Federal Reserve will release its Balance Sheet report, showing the amount of liquidity the Fed has injected into the economy by adding or removing reserves.

Join the forum discussion on this post - (1) Posts

2000 Words

Consider these charts:

As can be seen above, having a college degree is becoming worth less. And the cost continues to increase. Worst of all, one cannot default on student loans, so those who take on massive loans to fund their education will find that they are essentially slaves to the banks for life if they cannot find a decent-paying job.

I hope we can finally stop with the utterly worthless advice to go to college and pursue a career. The former is becomingly increasingly less correlated with the latter, and we are only doing a disservice to young people if we say otherwise.

Also, my experience has taught me that most of what passes for higher education is nothing more than drivel. Most of what is taught is obvious, wrong, or pointless. If you want to be smarter, go to the library and find good books to read. If you need help getting started, use a search engine to find classics of the western canon. Then imbibe deeply.

In the meantime, forget college.