Gold News

Price Crimes and False Premise

Inflation already here, but don't scare the Fed...
 
A DEAR READER asks how the average Joe can "get a leg up" in a dangerous and difficult world, says Bill Bonner in his Diary of a Rogue Economist.
 
It won't be easy.
 
Here's the latest mouthful from Bloomberg:
"Fed Officials Rattle Rate-Hike Saber as Price Pressures Surprise"
What Bloomberg is trying to say is that the Federal Reserve is hinting that it might...possibly...perhaps...raise rates.
 
Wednesday's Fed forecast suggested that two increases are likely in 2023; none before. In other words, it said nothing.
 
It could raise rates twice...three times...four times...even 10 times...and still be well below the level of consumer price increases.
 
Which is to say, the Fed is now "behind the curve"...following the trend of events, not leading it...and hopelessly stuck in an Inflate and Die trap.
 
But that is just to say that the "average Joe" should prepare now: Consumer prices will probably continue to rise. And if not now...later.
 
So let's look at the leg we're trying to get up.
 
Most people get their income from selling their time. A man with a backhoe can dig a trench faster than 10 men with shovels. The capital – the backhoe – is what makes a man's time more valuable.
 
But inflation takes away the backhoe. Here's Warren Buffett to explain:
"High rates of inflation create a tax on capital that makes much corporate investment unwise – at least if measured by the criterion of a positive real investment return to owners."
Remember, there are two sources of price increases.
 
One is natural, normal, and honest...caused by changing economic circumstances and signaling a real change of value – like the invention of the backhoe.
 
The other is phony – a product of the Fed's money-printing.
 
We have no quarrel with higher prices – if they're the first kind. But the second kind are a scam, designed to mislead, confuse, and ultimately defraud.
 
It is a crime perpetrated by the feds. Naturally, it favors the feds themselves and the elite, the top 10% of Americans they represent. They're not going to rip themselves off.
 
It's the others – the less well-off 90% of the population – that gets robbed.
 
And it's been going on a long time.
 
Earnings for people in elite industries – medical care, education, media, defense, Wall Street, and government itself – have all gone up smartly over the last 30 years.
 
Those for people in manufacturing, construction, mining, hospitality, and other uncool industries – where they produce real goods and services – have been mostly flat.
 
And now, as inflation increases, so will the rip-off.
 
As we explored yesterday, wage increases don't keep up with price increases.
 
Prices rise daily...weekly...monthly. Wages tend to be adjusted more slowly – on an annual basis...and in response to the previous year's inflation.
 
The wage-earner inevitably falls behind. The same is true for people who get Social Security; the adjustments lag the damage.
 
But the whole idea of the Fed's intentional inflation was a scam from the get-go...
 
Going back to the mid-20th century, economists noticed something they called the Phillips Curve. It purported to reveal that as inflation rose, workers got higher wages and suffered less unemployment.
 
This was shown to be false in the stagflation of the 1970s. But the "stimmy" fantasy survived. And the feds still claim they can stimulate the economy by inflating it with fake money.
 
They even set an annual inflation target – 2% – as if they knew exactly how much a bar of soap should cost.
 
The idea is laughable. But it still guides Fed policy.
 
Even before the 1970s, the French economist Jacques Rueff, explained the real reason the Phillips Curve was nonsense...and why inflation was so harmful to the working classes.
 
As prices rise, the relative cost of an hour of labor goes down. As labor becomes cheaper, the demand for it increases.
 
In other words, inflation only seemed to benefit the proletariat because it made the working man poorer!
 
And now, ripping him off is official policy – intentional, deliberate, and disastrous. The government is spending trillions it doesn't have. The Fed is printing the cash to cover the deficits.
 
And the costs will fall – principally – on the masses.
 
The elite are better able to protect themselves. They own property. And stocks. Their jobs, too, are more secure.
 
They are also more sophisticated financially, and can move their money into inflation-resistant assets. The shrewdest of them may take advantage of the chaos to buy valuable assets at discount prices.
 
(As the inflation crisis deepens, however, even many of the elite will suffer as their incomes fail to keep pace. That – when it no longer pays for the elite – will mark the beginning of the end of the inflation cycle.)
 
But what can you do to safeguard your wealth while prices spiral?
 
We mentioned real estate before. At today's low interest rates, a rental unit could turn out to be a very profitable asset. As prices rise, you should be able to raise the rent. And your fixed mortgage payments will become more and more affordable.
 
But real estate requires attention and work – which might not be practical.
 
As for stocks, energy companies typically do well in an inflationary period. They already have their rigs and refineries in place, so there's little extra cost to keeping the juice flowing. And they can increase prices without causing a significant drop in consumption.
 
That's why energy is on the buy side of our Trade of the Decade.
 
Infrastructure businesses may be even better. Toll roads. Hospitals. Airports. They have pricing power...and relatively little need for further investment. 
 
What you want for your business investments is the same thing you want for yourself – a steady, reliable stream of income with no need to spend more money to get it.
 
The ideal investment may be in a "royalty" or "streaming" company. These are businesses that own the rights to a stream of income – from, say, gold mining – but are not actively mining themselves.
 
As the price of gold goes up, their revenues increase in value, while they have few offsetting costs.
 
But money is only a part of it.
 
Inflation discombobulates a society. People get confused...distracted. They feel betrayed. They don't know who to trust or what to believe.
 
Our colleague Dan Denning emphasizes the need to be prepared socially and psychologically...as well as financially.
"You want to be in a place where you are comfortable and safe, where you are as little exposed to chaos and rising prices as possible. 
 
"You may not be able to increase your income; your time may become less valuable. So use your time to make yourself more independent."
Plant a garden. Rick up some firewood. Sit on the porch and read our book, Win-Win or Lose.
 
Buy gold. Sell bonds. Be happy.
 
Amor fati.

New York Times best-selling finance author Bill Bonner founded The Agora, a worldwide community for private researchers and publishers, in 1979. Financial analysts within the group exposed and predicted some of the world's biggest shifts since, starting with the fall of the Soviet Union back in the late 1980s, to the collapse of the Dot Com (2000) and then mortgage finance (2008) bubbles, and the election of President Trump (2016). Sharing his personal thoughts and opinions each day from 1999 in the globally successful Daily Reckoning and then his Diary of a Rogue Economist, Bonner now makes his views and ideas available alongside analysis from a small hand-picked team of specialists through Bonner Private Research.

See full archive of Bill Bonner articles

Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News.

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