Oh, and I'd say it's pretty clear that at least 50-66% of the participation drop is simple baby boomer demographics. So still a problem, it's just a question of getting the magnitudes correct. Nothing a few years of good growth won't fix.
You should write a letter to the fed and tell them about this. None of their projections for labor participation predicted this. The actual labor participation rate is lower than their lowest projection.
eskimo said:
This is false. Food prices have "exploded" at a rate that equates to approximately 2.5% inflation since 2009. (105 to 117 over 5 years)
Chocolate bars are 10-20% smaller but they cost the same. 5 pound bags of sugar are now 4 pounds but they cost the same. Cans of tuna have far less tuna but cost the same. Packages of bacon shrank from 1 pound down to 12 ounces, and the cost still went up. Going from 105 to 117 on a relative scale is not even close to reality.
eskimo said:
More false statements. I have never mentioned anything to you about peak oil or dismissed any oil production. Heating oil prices today are approximately the same as they were in 2008, despite a quadrupling of the money supply. A further vindication for Keynesians.
Maybe it was just Legend who blamed it on peak oil. He also blamed gold price on Peak Gold, silver on Peak Silver, rubber on Peak Rubber, coffee on Peak Coffee. Any item I offered as evidence of inflation was discarded as Peak ____. Why is beef expensive? We're at Peek Bovines. Why is corn so expensive? Peak Corn. Why are the Costa Rican pineapples I buy much more expensive today? Peak Pineapples, caused by a lack of rain in California. Bananas from all around the world? Peak Bananas, caused by California.
Anyway, do the math on your own link. $2.35 in 2009 up to $3.40 today. The price is back to where it was in 2008, which we all agree was the largest credit bubble ever. That works out to roughly 7-8% inflation (5th root of 3.4/2.35), so about 4x higher than the official inflation rate. One could argue that today's oil prices are severely distorted because we are once again in the largest credit bubble in history, but that's exactly my point - we're in the largest credit bubble in history, and it's distorting the price of everything.
More lies. I have never said inflation is not a good thing because it increases stock prices, inflation is a good thing because it reduces the real value of debt.
But it also reduces your ability to pay your existing debts. I've explained this several times before. If you start at a condition where you can put a comfortable 10% of your income to pay down debt (which is far more than most Americans can pay), that means 90% of your income goes to cost of living. What happens if your cost of living goes up 10%? Now your cost of living is 99% of your income, and only 1% goes to paying bills. That simple 10% inflation effectively reduced debt payment from 10 down to 1. It doesn't matter if that 10% is in one year or if that 10% happens over the span of 3 or 4 years. The result is the same either way. You have less money in your pocket to pay debt. So here's a real question: your own fed numbers say the cost of heating oil has gone up 44% between 2009 and today. Do you personally get paid 44% more today than you did back in 2008 or 2009 for doing the same job? I don't, and I don't think anyone else does. What's interesting is that fast food workers have similar numbers. Going from around $10 per hour or less in 2008 to demanding $15 per hour today? That's about 50%. Did they pull that number out of a hat, or does that number genuinely reflect a rising cost of living? You'll notice fast food places don't have $1 menus anymore. The fast food employers are coming to the same numbers as well. $1 items suddenly cost $1.30 or $1.50. Are we all part of a huge conspiracy to say the cost of living has gone up, or is it more reasonable to assume that we independently came to the same data-driven conclusions?
This inability to pay debt is also reflected in the country's credit rating. 1/3 of Americans have a bill in collections. Is this a conspiracy involving millions of people vowing to not pay their bills, or was that condition forced on them as a result of reduced purchasing power?
Retail sales have averaged an increase of close to 5% year on year in the last 5 years. The reality has been exactly the opposite of a sharp decline in retail spending.
And yet we still have retail apocalypse and dead malls across America. This boils down to 2 plausible scenarios:
1) It's Amazon's fault (at least partially true).
2) The inflation rate is higher than 5%, so 5% yearly growth actually means retail is shrinking in real terms. This would agree with the fed's oil price numbers, fast food workers, and fast food employers. We can look at a few example of this.
Best Buy gross profit (revenue less cost of revenue): 12.5b in 2011, 11.0b in 2012, 9.3b in 2013, 9.7b in 2014. They're still down more than 20% from 2011, and that's
nominal dollars, not adjusted for inflation. What's going on here?
Staples gross profit: 6.5b in 2011, 6.7b in 2012, 6.5b in 2013, 6.0b in 2014. Staples has been basically flat then dropping a bit less than 10% at the end. Again, that's nominal dollars.
Target gross profit: 21.7b in 2011, 22b in 2012, 22.7b in 2013, 21.4b in 2014. They've gone nowhere over the last 4 years.
Where is all of the increased spending? Food and energy, and even those companies don't seem to be improving much.
Kroger. Revenue, the number you're talking about, went from 82.0b in 2011 to 98.4b in 2014. That's a 20% increase in revenue over 3 years, averaging 6.3% growth per year. So far this agrees with your numbers. What about the cost of that revenue? It went from 63.8b in 2011 to 78.1b in 2014. That's 22.4% over 3 years, averaging 7.0% increased expenses per year. That number agrees with what I just said. A company that sells food says the inflation rate on their income statement is 7%, which is once again in that ballpark of 7-8% we saw in heating oil prices.
So that's my case. My own personal experience, fast food workers, heating oil, and Kroger all say the inflation rate is somewhere between 5-10%. You can either believe we're all working together in the largest conspiracy ever to perpetuate this lie about high inflation, or the fed and BLS are the ones lying.
Anyway, this is a thread about healthcare. At least healthcare has no inflation.