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2012年5月13日 星期日

Yes, Germany Might Boost Inflation. Here's How

The Financial Times reports today that Germany’s central bank, the Deutsche Bundesbank, “has signaled it would accept higher inflation in Germany.” The newspaper story says this would be “part of an economic rebalancing in the euro zone that would boost the international competitiveness of countries worst hit by the region’s debt crisis.”

This leads to two questions: Is it true, and how could it happen?

The answer to the first question is, yes, it’s true, and it’s not even particularly surprising. Not enough to justify making it the main story on the front page. ”Of course, the Bundesbank is stating the obvious,” Christian Schulz, senior economist in London at Berenberg Bank, Germany’s oldest bank, wrote me today in an e-mail.

What’s obvious is that with other countries, such as Greece, sliding into deep recessions with falling prices, the only way the euro zone as a whole can stick to its inflation target is for the stronger countries, such as Germany, to permit inflation rates above the euro zone average. The European Central Bank sets a medium-term goal of under but close to 2 percent per year for inflation in the euro zone as a whole.

“It’s simple arithmetic,” says Kermit Schoenholtz, director of the Center for Global Economy & Business at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

So that’s the math. The second question is how one country can have higher inflation than another if they share a single currency.

Easily. Even different parts of the U.S. have different rates of inflation. For example, prices are rising faster in North Dakota these days because of the influx of people and machinery to extract oil and natural gas. Inflation differentials are bigger and more persistent in Europe than in the U.S. because the barriers within the euro zone are higher than the ones in the U.S. “dollar zone.” Labor, for example, doesn’t move as easily across national borders to places where wages are higher, so wages can get stuck at uncompetitive levels (as in, say, Spain).

For years, Germany had lower inflation than the likes of Greece, Portugal, and Spain. That was because the peripheral economies were growing rapidly and businesses were careless about keeping a lid on costs. Germany grew at a healthy clip as well but focused relentlessly on improving productivity, so its costs rose more slowly. That’s why Germany’s economy is far more competitive today.

“If the euro area is going to hang together over the long run, you have to undo those competitiveness gaps that have been created,” says Schoenholtz. The peripheral countries need to lower their prices relative to Germany’s. If Germany had very low inflation, those countries would require outright deflation, which is extremely painful. If Germany accepts somewhat higher inflation, primarily via more generous wages to workers, the rest of Europe can have a low but still positive inflation rate.

Says Schoenholtz: “To anybody who’s a monetary economist, this isn’t news.”


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2011年12月8日 星期四

Spending Boost? Tax Inflows Show Income Gains

December 07, 2011, 7:02 PM EST By Bob Willis

(Updates markets in sixth paragraph.)

Dec. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Rising tax receipts show household incomes in the U.S. are growing faster than currently estimated, and by enough to sustain consumer spending, according to economists like Joe LaVorgna.

Tax revenue from employee pay was up 4.8 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier after adjusting for changes in withholding rates over the past few years, said LaVorgna, who is the chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York. By contrast, the Commerce Department’s figures show wages and salaries climbed 2.9 percent over the same period.

Taxes more accurately reflect the state of the job market because they are not subject to revision and workers don’t pay the Internal Revenue Service on “phantom” wages, LaVorgna said in a note to clients yesterday. The revenue numbers also mean the latest readings on savings are too low, eliminating another obstacle to a pickup in household purchases, he said.

“People say consumer spending can’t be sustained because the savings rate is falling, but they have it wrong,” LaVorgna, a former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said in an interview yesterday. “Since we know income is understated, by default the savings rate is understated. The consumer is going to stay sustainably stronger than what I think the consensus believes.”

The savings rate was 3.5 percent in October compared with 5.3 percent a year earlier, according to figures from the Commerce Department. It sank to an almost four-year low 3.3 percent in September.

Shares Drop

Stocks were little changed today, erasing earlier declines, as retailers and financial companies rallied and European officials weighed measures to ease the debt crisis ahead of a summit this week. The Standard & Poor’s 500 dropped 0.1 percent to 1,256.75 at 1:11 p.m. in New York.

German industrial production rose more than economists forecast in October as factories weathered the debt turmoil that hurt output in other countries across the region and threatens to trigger a recession. Production climbed 0.8 percent from September, when it dropped 2.8 percent, the Economy Ministry in Berlin said today. Separate reports showed industrial output declined in the U.K., Italy and Norway.

China’s Commerce Ministry said today that rising costs and a slowdown in overseas demand may put “severe” pressure on its exports next year. Higher wages, along with a jump in land and raw-materials prices and a stronger yuan are restraining shipments, the Commerce Ministry said. While China can achieve export gains as long as Europe’s crisis doesn’t deepen, it will need to focus on strengthening links with emerging markets, Wang Shouwen, head of the foreign trade department, said at a briefing in Beijing.

Payroll Revisions

Revisions to the monthly U.S. payroll counts are another sign the American job market is stronger than the initial data suggest, LaVorgna said. In the five months to October, payrolls have been revised up by an average 49,000 a month from their initial readings, he said.

Additionally, a divergence between the two surveys conducted by the Labor Department to calculate the jobless rate and payrolls indicates employment may be stronger, LaVorgna said. Figures from the survey of households show the economy has created 1.28 million jobs in the past four months, more than twice the 534,000 registered in the separate count of employers.

His calculations show that as of the third quarter, the level of wages and salaries is understated by almost $125 billion, a “substantial” difference, LaVorgna wrote in the research note. Over an entire year, that is “worth nearly two percentage points on the saving rate,” he said.

Finding Income

“It’s clear that consumers have dug into their savings to finance consumption, but I don’t think they’ve dug as deep as the data suggest,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “Typically, when the numbers get revised, the government finds more income than has been reported. Down the road, I think we’ll look back and find households had more income than we think they do now.”

Consumer spending grew at a 2.3 percent rate in the third quarter after increasing at a 0.7 percent pace in the prior period and 2.1 percent in the first three months of the year, according to data from the Commerce Department.

Since then, reports indicate the gains are continuing this quarter. Retail sales in October rose 0.5 percent after a 1.1 percent increase the prior month that was the best reading since February, the Commerce Department said on Nov. 15.

Retail Sales

Purchases at Saks Inc., the luxury department store based in New York, increased 9.3 percent in November from the same month last year, exceeding the estimate of 5.9 percent, the company said in a statement Dec. 1.

“What you saw on Black Friday is people were excited early,” Steve Sadove, chief executive officer of Saks, said in a Bloomberg Television interview, referring to the day after the Thanksgiving holiday, which traditionally kicks off the holiday spending period.

Auto sales rose to a 13.6 million unit annual pace in November, up from a 13.2 million rate the prior month and the highest level since August 2009, according to industry data.

Taking into account the better-than-forecast sales figures, the economy is growing at about a 3 percent annual rate this quarter from a previously projected 2.5 percent pace, according to a forecast by Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. Gross domestic product rose at a 2 percent rate last quarter.

--Editors: Carlos Torres, Vince Golle

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net


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2011年6月5日 星期日

Funds Boost Bullish Commodity Bets on Global Growth Prospects

June 05, 2011, 12:16 PM EDT By Yi Tian

June 6 (Bloomberg) -- Funds boosted bets on rising commodity prices to the highest in four weeks, led by copper, amid signs that the global economic recovery will remain resilient and boost demand for raw materials.

Speculators raised their net-long positions in 18 commodities by 7.3 percent to 1.26 million futures and options contracts in the week ended May 31, government data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s the highest since May 3. Copper holdings more than doubled. A measure of bullish agriculture bets also climbed as adverse global weather curbed crop production.

The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index rose for a fourth straight week as Chinese metal inventories plunged and droughts lingered in the Asian country and Europe, trimming prospects for wheat and cotton crops. The global recovery “is gaining strength,” the Group of Eight leaders said May 27 after a summit in Deauville, France. In the U.S., consumer sentiment rose to a three-month high in May, a private report showed last month.

“We are seeing a reasonable rate of growth in worldwide economic activity,” said Michael Cuggino, who helps manage $12 billion at Permanent Portfolio Funds in San Francisco. “The supply-demand associated with that growth, combined with a weaker dollar, probably explains the move into commodities.”

Copper prices have jumped 40 percent in the past year while wheat has surged 75 percent and corn has more than doubled amid increasing demand from China and other emerging economies. Raw materials have also gained as investors boosted holdings as an alternative to the dollar, which has slumped more than 6 percent this year against a six-currency basket.

$130 Million

Investors poured $130 million into commodity funds in the week ended June 1, the second straight increase, according to EPFR Global, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based researcher. The previous week had inflows of $702.8 million.

Managed-money funds and other large speculators boosted bullish bets on New York copper prices by 4,604 contracts to 7,304. The jump was the biggest since October 2009. Stockpiles of the metal monitored by Shanghai Futures Exchange have plunged 51 percent since mid-March.

“Destocking cannot continue indefinitely, and market participants will have to return to the market at the latest in the fourth quarter, if not for re-stocking then at least for spot purchases,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a report last week.

Agriculture Bets

Speculators raised their net-long positions in 11 U.S. farm goods by 4.6 percent to 756,629 contracts as of May 31, the second straight increase. Holdings of wheat jumped 14 percent, and bets on a cotton rally gained up 12 percent, the most since August.

“It has basically been a year of the wrong weather at the wrong time, starting with the Russian droughts and then most recently excessive rains in the U.S.,” said Nic Johnson, who helps manage about $24 billion in commodities at Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California. Agriculture “prices could move materially higher because of low inventories and if we have below-trend yields of crops like corn.”

--With assistance from Debarati Roy in New York. Editors: Millie Munshi, Patrick McKiernan

To contact the reporter on this story: Yi Tian in New York at ytian8@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steve Stroth at sstroth@bloomberg.net


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