Multi-sectoral production–one for Geeks

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Paul Krug­man some­times intro­duces his more com­pli­cat­ed posts on his blog as being “wonk­ish”. This post is wonk­ish in spades–though in the linked papers rather than the con­tent here.

I’ve just fin­ished the first rea­son­able descrip­tion of my mul­ti-sec­toral mon­e­tary mod­el of pro­duc­tion, which I’ll be pre­sent­ing at the Paul Wool­ley Cen­tre for Cap­i­tal Mar­ket Dys­func­tion­al­i­ty con­fer­ence lat­er this month.

There’s lots more to add before the mod­el is com­plete, but this is a work­ing first draft. Lat­er addi­tions will include a ten­den­cy to equalise prof­it rates across sec­tors and fixed cap­i­tal, as well as fiat mon­ey cre­ation in addi­tion to pure cred­it mon­ey as in this mod­el.

The Economy, How Bad Is It?

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The Econ­o­my, How Bad Is It?
The econ­o­my is so bad:
That I got a pre-declined cred­it card in the mail.
I ordered a burg­er at McDon­alds and the kid behind the counter asked, “Can you afford fries with that?”
That CEO’s are now play­ing minia­ture golf.
If the bank returns your check marked “Insuf­fi­cient Funds,” you call them and ask if they meant you or them.
Hot Wheels and Match­box stocks are trad­ing high­er than GM.
McDon­alds is sell­ing the 1/4 ounc­er.
Par­ents in Bev­er­ly Hills have fired their nan­nies and learnt their chil­dren’s names.
T truck­load of Amer­i­cans was caught sneak­ing into Mex­i­co.
Dick Cheney took his stock­bro­ker hunt­ing.
The Mafia is lay­ing off judges.
Exxon-Mobil laid off 25 Con­gress­men.
And final­ly
Con­gress says they are look­ing into this Bernard Mad­off scan­dal.
Oh, great!!  The guy who made $50 Bil­lion dis­ap­pear is being inves­ti­gat­ed by the peo­ple who made $1.5 Tril­lion dis­ap­pear!

In the spir­it of “we all need a laugh”, this list of jokes is doing the rounds in the USA:

RBA gets it wrong again

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The RBA has put rates up now on the belief that the finan­cial cri­sis is behind us, and it has to return to its estab­lished role of con­trol­ling infla­tion.

That this deci­sion was like­ly was flagged by the speech by Antho­ny Richards last week, which implied that the RBA, hav­ing ignored the house price bub­ble cre­at­ed by pri­vate cred­it growth in the pre­ced­ing two decades, was wor­ried about the renew­al of the bub­ble ini­ti­at­ed by the Gov­ern­men­t’s First Home Ven­dors Boost (I refuse to call it by its offi­cial name, since the mon­ey clear­ly went to the ven­dors, while the buy­ers copped only high­er prices).

Debtwatch No. 39 October 2009: In the Dark on Cause and Effect

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One of the keynote speak­ers at the 38th Aus­tralian Con­fer­ence of Econ­o­mists in Ade­laide last week was Edward Lazear, who was Chair­man of the US Pres­i­den­t’s Coun­cil of Eco­nom­ic Advis­ers from 2006-09.

In oth­er words, he was in one of the world’s eco­nom­ic hot­seats right when the “Great Mod­er­a­tion” (see also Ger­ard Bak­er’s UK Times arti­cle in ear­ly 2007) gave way to the Glob­al Finan­cial Cri­sis.

When Herds Collide on the Yellow Brick Road

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2010 is shap­ing up as the year that the bulls and bears of the world’s last unpopped asset mar­ket bubble—Australia’s prop­er­ty market—will col­lide head on. The gap between those pre­dict­ing yet anoth­er bub­ble, and those pre­dict­ing its ulti­mate demise, has closed.

The bulls as always, empha­sise the “fundamentals”—population-fuelled demand out­strip­ping lag­gard­ly supply—and that “Aus­tralia is dif­fer­ent”.

The bears, as always, empha­sise lever­age— that the true fun­da­men­tal behind asset prices is peo­ple’s will­ing­ness to go into debt to buy them, in the belief that they can flog them for a lever­aged prof­it to the next Greater Fool. And on the “We’re dif­fer­ent because we have kan­ga­roos” the­o­ry, the bears con­tend that Aussies are just as sus­cep­ti­ble to a well dis­guised Ponzi Scheme as any­body else on the plan­et.

It’s Hard Being a Bear (Part Six)?Good Alternative Theory?

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If the econ­o­my does in fact recov­er from the Glob­al Finan­cial Cri­sis—with­out pri­vate debt lev­els once again ris­ing rel­a­tive to GDP—then my approach to eco­nom­ics will be proven wrong.

But this won’t prove con­ven­tion­al neo­clas­si­cal eco­nom­ic the­o­ry right, because, for very dif­fer­ent rea­sons to those that I put for­ward, mod­ern neo­clas­si­cal eco­nom­ics argues that the gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy to improve the econ­o­my is inef­fec­tive. The suc­cess of a gov­ern­ment res­cue would thus con­tra­dict neo­clas­si­cal eco­nom­ics just as much—or maybe even more—than it would con­tra­dict my analy­sis.

Why I use Mathcad

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A new blog mem­ber asked “Why do you use Math­cad?” in response to my most recent post about using some of the funds donat­ed by vis­i­tors to the blog to help fund my research.

It’s a very good tech­ni­cal ques­tion, and one that deserves more than just a reply to the com­ment. So I’ll try to explain why here.

I build dynam­ic mod­els of the econ­o­my using sys­tems of ordi­nary dif­fer­en­tial equa­tions. There are many pro­grams that sup­port this these days, from pub­lic domain pro­grams like Scilab to com­mer­cial giants like Math­e­mat­i­ca and Math­cad. I’ve tried most of them, and I’ve stuck with Math­cad for two rea­sons:

Thanks to donors

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Thank you to the rough­ly 170 indi­vid­u­als who have made dona­tions to date via the “Donate” wid­get on the right hand side of the blog.

Dona­tions have totalled A$7,730, of which about $800 has been for Michael Hud­son’s talk in Syd­ney (on Fri­day Octo­ber 23rd at Cus­toms House, Syd­ney at 6pm).

I have just made the first pur­chase using those funds, of a Dell Stu­dio 17 inch lap­top that I will use while research­ing with my sys­tems engi­neer­ing col­league Trond Andresen in Europe lat­er this year.

Dinner with Michael Hudson?

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There will be a din­ner with Michael Hud­son and his wife after the talk at Cus­toms House on Fri­day Octo­ber 23rd at a restau­rant called Young Alfred, which is also in Cus­toms House. The din­ner will start at 8pm.

If you’d like to be part of the book­ing, please let me know via an email to me at debunk­ing (at) gmail dot com (spelt out this way to min­imise the addi­tion to the already ridicu­lous amount of spam I receive!).

It’s Hard Being a Bear (Part Five): Rescued?

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I’m happy to admit that I underestimated how strongly governments would respond to this financial crisis. Dramatic reductions in interest rates, huge fiscal stimuli and—in the USA and UK—expansion of government-created money, have all had a positive impact on the economy and asset markets (both shares and houses).

In his recent essay, Aus­tralian Prime Min­is­ter Kevin Rudd esti­mat­ed that the res­cues were the equiv­a­lent of rough­ly 18 per­cent of glob­al GDP over a 3 year peri­od, which is an unprece­dent­ed lev­el of expen­di­ture by gov­ern­ments.

Eichen­green and O’Rourke’s com­par­i­son of today to the Great Depres­sion gives the most bal­anced assess­ment of how effec­tive these poli­cies have been at the glob­al lev­el.