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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 2, 2023

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All this to say: What the fuck do we do about the fact that owning shit and renting shit is just flat out better in every way than doing shit or making shit?

How do you solve it without the revolution? Is that question even coherent?

Income inequality goes up over time when there's not a major economic downturn or war. The U.S. has now gone a (nearly unprecedented in history) 75 years without either of those things happening. As you point out, all that's needed to be rich is to invest your money and not be a fuckup for 1.5 generations and let compound returns do the rest.

How to solve it without a revolution? Bring back the business cycle.

We haven't had a recession in 15 fucking years. And interest rates were kept artificially low for 14 of those years. With no substantial downturns, anyone with leveraged investments cashed in. TQQQ (the triple-levered NASDAQ fund) is up nearly 100x since inception in 2010. Speculators won out big time. To prevent inequality from growing too high, we need to flush speculators regularly. People who make bad bets need to lose badly.

High interest rates for a long period of time (a decade at least) would flush the speculators and lower income inequality to tolerable levels. Sadly, I don't think it's possible with the governments debt being what it is.

Income inequality hasn't been increasing once you account for taxes and transfers. https://johnhcochrane.blogspot.com/2021/04/inequality-mirage.html?m=1

Thanks. That's a great pushback to the standard narrative and I think it's largely true. My guess is that it this would not apply if we look at wealth inequality.

As I've brought up before on this forum, people are often confused about inequality due to the fixation on income. The top 1% of income changes every year due to windfalls. I believe that something like 7% of earners will be in the top 1% in one year during their life. Meanwhile, an heiress with a $75 million net worth might never appear in the top 1% by income since it's all in tax-sheltered investments. The heiress is rich. The plumber who sells his practice and makes $600,000 at the end of his career is not.

The rise in wealth inequality is due to low financial volatility and low interest rates.

Income inequality I'm not sure about, or it might not even exist net transfers.

Here's more on the problems with how we think about inequality. https://www.themoneyillusion.com/income-and-wealth-inequality-data-nonsense-on-stilts/

How does this relate to the discussion at hand specifically? Not a criticism, just want to move the discussion forward for people who are reading along.

I'm just making a more general point that a lot of the arguments that say that income inequality is really high are wrong.

Does this have to take the form of recessions as they have been in the past? They tend to do a lot of harm to productive economic activity, even if they disproportionately culling bad investments. An ideal economy should just have some rate of creative destruction that doesn't strike fear into everyone's hearts. I have no idea what the difference between here and there is, though.

In an idealized world this is how Keynesian economics work.

The government makes sure that there's a stable money supply, it keeps its fingers out of most businesses, but takes steps to boost aggregate demand during downturns (as failing businesses go under) to 'smooth out' the business cycle so that there's never any point where EVERYONE is feeling the pinch at the same time.

And interest rates were kept artificially low for 14 of those years.

I see this claim a lot, and it's based on a misunderstanding of what the Fed actually does. If the Fed tries to lower interest rates below the natural rate of interest and hold them there, we get inflation. Now, not after 14 years.

What the Fed actually does is help markets clear faster by targeting the natural rate of interest, i.e. the rate at which the amount of money people want to lend is equal to the amount other people want to borrow. This results in savings being efficiently channeled into investments. If the Fed sets rates too high, there are excess savings that don't get borrowed, causing a recession. If the Fed sets rates too low, it causes inflation.

The fact that inflation was unusually low in the 2010s tells us that the Fed was more or less correctly targeting the natural interest rate, or even a bit above it; the natural interest rate may have actually been negative in the early 2010s.

The huge spike in inflation in 2021 was not the chickens coming come to roost after 14 years of artificially low interest rates. It was the result of a sharp increase in the money supply that made the early rounds of QE look like anthills, combined with excessive stimulus, and pandemic savings burning holes in the pockets of middle-class consumers.

You say rates should be as low as possible without causing inflation. I say they should be as high as possible without causing unemployment. Who's right? The Fed has a lot of room to make decisions based on vibes, not just their dual mandate. Reminder me again why they lowered rates in 2019 into record low unemployment?

But yes, I was oversimplifying and lumping QE/QT in with interest rates.

As long as it is due to a high savings rate and not a low demand for capital, a low interest rate is good because it increases asset prices, making us richer, and makes more potential investments profitable, expanding the capital stock, which increases productivity and the demand for labour, raising incomes.