Website Color Scheme

Navigation

Article Categories

Navigation

Search

Analysis & Editorial

You Won't Like the Future

End of Combat Operations

Recent Demotivational Posters

Information Entitlement Doctrine of Barack Obama

Responsibility

Schutzstaffel for the New American Century

GOP Hate Machine Cranks It Up

Fair Fare

A Message to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs

Woe of Mine Enemies, Twits Though They Be

Gods of Sovereigns

The Privilege and Its Consequence

Elements of Racism and the Arc of Hate

Mel Gibson and Benjamin Franklin

Sarah Palin for Republican National Committee Chairwoman

Recent Graphics Fun

The Good Prince

Meg Whitman FAIL

Technology of Takings

For Men Only (and It's about Women)

For Tony Hayward

Sea Lion to Be Executed for Eating Salmon

Perception Management FAIL

About That Nightmare Last Night

The Worth of a Wastling

Moderately Annoyed Cat for June 7, 2010

Ugly Matrices

Profiting in the Age of the Falling Sky

Hard Warning

Storm Photography

Special Video Lecture: Leftist Economics

Ministry

Then Again, and Now, Too

The Sovereign's Own and the Dead Preacher

Introducing Moderately Annoyed Cat

President New Age Authoritarian

The Price of a Freebie

The Canvas and Brushstrokes of Nightfall

Minor Notes for February 6, 2010

How's School Going This Year?

Featured Grousing, Installment 1

Personal Journey and Red Velvet Cake

Christmas 2009

Financial Industry Reform

Open Forum: The Autumn Semester 2009 Finals Week Edition

The Pope and His Nation

The Megaphone, the Zombie, and the Church Choir

Evidence of War Crimes: The Obstructionist Doctrine of Barack Obama

Veterans Day 2009

Health Care Reform and Debate That Never Happened

Tuesday Night Photography: Harvest Waiting

Hallowe'en 2009 Graphics
  #1    #2

FOX News and That Obama Administration "Obsession"

What Will You Do?

Favorable Signs of a Sustainable Economic Recovery

Recession to Recovery: The Rough and Narrow Road Ahead

The Long, Disjointed, and Tedious Story of Why I Wear a Tie to Class Every Day

Gothardism on Parade

Subtle, Yet Somehow Rather Troubling

Finally, Some Decent Conspiracy Theory for a Change

An Opus for Health

The Sun Does Not Rise at the Nightfall of Freedom

Bill and Barack

The Birthers Were Right

Grunge Men, Obama Man, All the Men Together

Misleading CNN.com Headline Denigrates Secretary of State

Interview with a Grouchy Economist

Obama Up, Obama Down

The Teaching and Use of Economics

Palin's Resignin'

Righteous Wrath of an Analyst Who Got It Right

Precious Sarah

Iran at the Precipice of Now

The Curtain Drawn, the Revolution Begun

Self-Immolation, British Style

Coddled Thugs

Can't Pimp That Log

A Letter to Peter of Lone Tree

Fiery Winds and the Streets Below

Hope? Sure. Change? Meh.

Wisdom and Experience

Soul Hunters

Memorial Day 2009

Gingrich on Pelosi, History on Gingrich

Digital Landscapes
    Number 1

Forced Nudity as Subjugation

You. Were. Warned.

Nancy Pelosi and the Fate of Pawns

Sovereign Be the Thug

Dark Wraith Photography
    Portfolio One
    Portfolio Two

Statement on Volunteering to Waterboard Sean Hannity

CNN Plunges Further to the Right

Maelstrom

The Shministim

That 'How Progressive Are You?' Quiz

Mortality

Cowards and Thugs

The End of Time, Epilogue

Sen. Diane Feinstein's Net Neutrality Killer

Our Children and Our Children's Children

A Paleo-Conservative Message to Republicans

One-liners, Rimshots, and Insults for Monday

Republicans: "U.S. economy is robust and job creation is strong"

First, Justice

Ghosts of Outrage: The Dragnets

Mr. Obama, You Are an Authoritarian

Principles of Finance and Economics: The Sex and Money Edition

Paleo-Conservative Rant, Episode One

Memo Penned to Ruins

2009 Begins

Christmas 2008

Public Opinion of Dick Cheney

Problem Interrupted

Macroeconomics Quiz 2: Monetary Policy, Fiscal Policy, and International Trade

Four Years

Obama and His Space Cadet

Pulp Illinois

Feast of Famine

A Comment to David Sirota

President 2.0

Attorney General Mukasey Collapses

Obama's Questionable Personnel Decisions Continue Apace

More Center-Right Signals from Obama Camp

Rahm Emanuel: Chief of Staff, All-Around Thug

Extinction 2008

The Unspeakable Endorses the Irredeemable for the Honor of the Unattainable

Obama Vengeance on Press Corps Enemies

Sarah Palin, All on Her Own

National Disgrace: U.S. Ranks 29th in Infant Mortality Rate

Definitional Fascism

Obama Gets It and Gets It Right (on Free Trade, Anyway)

Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize-Winning Globalist

Errors and Omissions

Hallowe'en 2008 Graphics
  #1    #2

Was Martial Law Threatened?

McCain Budgeting

Treasury Secretary Taps Fellow Former Goldman Sachs Executive to Oversee Bailout

"What should we do, sir, submit or fight?"

The People (Who Matter) Have Spoken

The Biden versus Palin Debate: Summary Evaluation

Dear God, Senator McCain, What Were You Thinking?

Battles and Wars

To the Members of Congress Concerning the Bailout Proposal

Bailout: Conservative Republicans Offer Weak Alternative

Letterman on McCain

Cadre

The Echo of Now

What Became of John

Stereotype for Stereotype

Racist Anti-Obama Merchandise at 2008 Values Voter Summit

End Time Rescheduled

Regarding That Fundraiser, Sir

Let them feed

Future Supreme Court Justices

A Note on Why John McCain Should Be President

Song of the Dragon

For Sak'art'velo

John Edwards, Man Slut

The Dominionist Cast Asunder

March 13, 2008

Sheep and Lambs

Manifesto in Black

Peek-a-Boo Politics

Mortar Man

War Mongers, War Buyers

Incompetence, Sedition, and a Note on Lousiness

Plain Language

Energy Horizon

The Dark Wraith Video Lecture Series
    Lecture 1: Economics Defined
    Lecture 2: The Equation of Exchange

Farewell, My King

China and the "Free Market" Myth

The Gospel of Impending Doom

A Conspiracy Theory Primer

In RE: The Rule of Law v. Justice

The Torch and the Spear

The Dark Wraith Audio Lecture Series
  Lecture 1
  Lecture 2
  Lecture 3
  Lecture 4
  Lecture 5
  Lecture 6
  Lecture 9
  Lecture 10
  Lecture 11
  Lecture 12

American Food: The Blow-Chow Festival Continues

The Descent of Iraq

On Modern Education

The Federal Reserve under Fire
  Part One    Part Two

Recession, Central Bank Intervention, and Tax Rebates

Prelude to Finale

For Tibet

Abigail Adams' Coffee Ginger Cakes, Modified and Made

The Ambiguity of Darkness

The Fox and the Weasels: CENTCOM Commander Resigns under Pressure from White House

Pharmaceutical Water

The Rule of Law and the Imperative of Appeasement

McCain and the Straight Talk Express to Lobbyville

An Exercise from Urban Economics

MOOOO! (with a Side Order of Hurl)

Smoke, Mirrors, and the Rule of Law

The Black Curtain

George Orwell Was a Loser

Conspiracy Theorist Communications

Bill Gates and "Creative Capitalism"

Academic Podcasts by Dark Wraith

Political Nihilism My Way

Obama on the Lesson of the Reagan Revolution

Tomorrow and Tomorrow

The Strait of Hormuz Incident

Candidate Graphics: Huckabee File

Obama on Fire

The End of Time

The Murder of Osama bin Laden

The Lioness Fallen

Christmas 2007

O Little Shill

Lieberman Endorses McCain for President

First Impressions from Conference Call with SEIU President Andy Stern

December 13, 2004

Friday Teleconference Questions for SEIU President Andy Stern

Macroeconomics Quiz 1: Monetary Matters

Key Democrats Knew, Did Not Object to U.S. Torture Policy

Time Magazine Conflates Destroyed Torture Tapes, 'Conspiracy Theorists'

Democracy for the New American Century

Taxes Rates, Tax Brackets, and Thompson

Economic Systems in the Abstract, Capitalism Applied

Al Gore Joins Silicon Valley Venture Capital Firm

Veterans Day 2007

Bush and the Dems: More Socialism for Right-wing Welfare Queens

Modernity and a Teacher's Answer from the Cave of Antiquity and Irrelevance

The Victim and His Victory

Theory of the Firm, Industry Structure, and Regulation
  Part 1  

News Framing at CNN.com

A Hill People Story for Sunday Night

Hallowe'en 2007 Graphics
  #1    #2    #3

The 21st Century, Epilogue

French Cream Pies

The Outrage This Time

Conservatism My Way, Blunt and Hard

Caduceus of the American Way

Migrations, Urgency, and a Contemplation Precedent to Joy

Why the Democrats Won't Stand

Essence of Issue: Republicans Debate American Policy for Iraq

Sa Bataille Finale, Sa Dernière Défaite

Prelude to the 73rd Hour of Nightfall

The State and the State of Osama bin Laden: Marketing and Medievalism

Economic Incentives and Anti-competitive Markets: A Healthcare Price-gouging Story

Grammar and Punctuation Quiz

Bush Family Blue

Pulp Economics: Liquidity, Open Market Operations, and Financial Institution Portfolios

Battle Cry of Moral Equivocation, Financial Markets Edition

Death Spiral Aversion: Wall Street and the Fed, Together Again

Election Race Dialogue: Critique One

Essay on the American Way and Circumstance

History of the Future

Prime Minister of the United States of America

Right-Wing Judge Dismisses Suit by Spy Exposed by Bush Administration

Exit as Stage Prop

Ripping CNN.com a New One in 500 Characters

Sixth Circuit Court Orders Dismissal of Domestic Spying Lawsuit against NSA

Special Video Post: Survey of Justice, A.D. 2007

Afghanistan: Vertical Opium Monopoly

China, the Internet, and Censorship

The Audacity of Cynicism

Special Video Post: Foundations of the Legal and Regulatory Environment of Business

Statistical Trends in the American-Iraqi War

A Short Rant on Free Markets and Asymmetric Warfare

Responsibility and Retribution

Remembering Shelby

Politics, War, and a Note on the Linguistics of Cowardice

Bible in Blue

Special Video Post: Exchange Rates

College

The Right Way for a New World

Blogging the Code

Colorful Academics

Special Video Post: Money Economics

Shadows from a Future Arriving

The Pardon Problem

The Economics of Wreckage
  Part One  Part Two  
  Part Three  Part Four

The locusts shall not prevail

Statement

Principles of Economics: Origins of the Discipline, Video Edition

More Practical Math for the New American Century

The Trials

Resolve and Resolution

Humor That Won't Be for Everyone

The Battlefield and the Nomads

Index Portfolio Performance during the Bush Administration's First Six Years

Peter Daou and I

The Moment of a Comet

The Age of War

Neo-Con End Run

Doughnuts and Banking

On "Troop Redeployment"

"Surge and Accelerate": A Note on the Republican-Democrat Support Axis

A Realist's Best Shot at New Year's Wishes

The Execution of Saddam

Words, Pictures, and Reality

Exits at the Bus Station

The Long Twilight of Economic Empire

The Wall and the Wedge

Details and Devils

They the People

Assassinations and the Beneficiaries

Lay off it, Mr. Rangel

When to Pay Respect

Economist Milton Friedman Dies

The Harvest and the Wind

Ohio GOP Poll Workers Received Supplemental Training

In Moot Defense of Saddam

Weekend on the Homefront

Even Now To Be Free

The Remedial Future

The end of all things

Public Policy and Intolerance in Commerce

Costs to the U.S. of 20th and 21st Century Wars

Silencing Corporate Whistleblowers

Enter the Dragons

Fun with Trolls

Ludwig von Mises

Put a Cork in It, Arianna

In Response, If Response Were Appropriate

Only Numbers

Rationality, Incentives, and the Agency Dilemma

Hydrocarbon Battlefields

Casualty Allocation in Modern Warfare

The Sacrifice of Pawns

Dark Arts Politics: The Beginning

Dark Arts Politics
    Firebreaking
  Part 1  Part 2

An Open Letter to Senator Hillary Clinton

Deleted and Republished

The Rightful Nation

A Brief Note about the Sky and the Road

A Comment on Massacre

Exchange Rate Regimes

The Woodshed

Index Portfolio Performance during the Bush Administration to Date

Foreign Trade and Debt

Before the Storm, the Rant

The Gaming Game

One Thousand Fifteen

Budget Deficit Projected to Reach Near-Record for 2006

A Tactical Decision before the End Game

Currencies of War

Index Portfolio Performance during the Bush Administration to Date

The Belt of Justice

The Clear and Compelling Case for a Truth Commission

Aftermath of the 2004 Presidential Election

The Message and the Message

Toward Full Yield Curve Inversion

In Sufferance of the Permanence of Hell

A Walk-Down Primer on the U.S. Trade Deficit with China

And Now, Ladies and Gentlemen, a Rant

The Inconsequential Citizen, the Inconsequential State

Index Portfolio Performance for the First Five Years of the Bush Administration

Yield Curve Inversion 2006

A Brief Reminder about the Color of Whitewash

Yield Curves 2005

Treasury Secretary Calls Clinton Budget Surplus "a Mirage"

A Head-Banger Primer on Tax Cuts and Job Formation

I Am Become Battle, How White Be My Tears

The Structure of an Interest Rate
  Part 1  

An Open Letter to Bill O'Reilly

A Brief Story of Money
  Part 1   Part 2   

Index Portfolio Performance During the Bush Administration to Date

On Condemnation of Weakness

The Filibuster, the Quorum, and the Nuclear Exchange

The Color of Whitewash

Senator Frist in Media Klieg Lights

Blackwater USA and a Controversial Former Pentagon IG

Questions Surround Frist Blind Trust Stock Sale

Let Slip the Mercenaries to Our Shores

Yahoo! Accused of Providing China with Information to Jail Reporter

The Area Denial Option: From Fallujah to New Orleans

Able Danger and the Secretary of State

The Unraveling and Unfolding of Iraq

The Whispers of Bombs

Pumpkins and Futures

Practical Math for the New American Century

A Bad Idea Made Better for Tax Reform

A Bad Idea for Tax Reform

War, Inc.: A Summary Financial Analysis of One Corporation

Stone, Sand, and the Writ of History

La'ana-hum Allah

If the Truth Be Told

Fire and Seeds

Of Crystal Balls and Yield Curves

Seven Principles of Macroeconomics

The Ancient Future

First Impugn Honor; All Else Will Then Perish

The 21st Century
  Opus 1  Opus 2
  Opus 3  Opus 4

The Importance of the Hourglass

A Look at Private Social Security Accounts

The Valerie Plame Scandal
  Part I   Part II   Part III

In the Winter of This Night

The Blood of One

These Doors and the World Beyond

The Coming Social Security Crisis

The Hard Land

Prologue to the Book of Consequences

In the Stead of Hope

The Future as a Lesser Place

Atonement by Proxy

Archives by Month

The Economics of Wreckage, Part Two

This is the second in the series, "The Economics of Wreckage," which surveys the way in which the economy has been managed in recent times both by the Bush Administration and, more broadly, by Presidents and Congresses during the post-World War II era. Part One of the series is the most recent in a continuing demonstration of how the major stock market indices have fared poorly during the Bush Administration, thereby rendering stark evidence that the putative owners of capital, the shareholders of public corporations, have not garnered their share of what has clearly been a robustly growing economy. The present article presents the much longer term case for the extent of and reasons for the workers of the United States having not realized their share of that real economic growth.

The all-watching eyeSustained, robust economic growth is a key goal of modern policymakers both in Washington and in state capitols. Recent articles have highlighted, somewhat to the consternation of President Bush's critics, what has apparently been surprisingly strong growth during much of his Presidency. Right-wing explanations master George Will, writing in a June 10, 2007, op-ed piece for the Washington Post, crowed about "65 months... of uninterrupted growth," among other breath-taking economic performance numbers. Over a much longer term than Mr. Will described, given his interest in focusing attention on his favored politician, the real (that is, inflation-adjusted) economy of the United States has grown with barely a pause, as can be seen in the simple graphic below, drawn from real GDP data provided by the St. Louis Federal Reserve.

Real U.S. GDP, 1964 to 2006

But that remarkable run of sustained economic expansion strikes many as profoundly contrary to the course their own economic circumstances have taken over the past several decades. Writing at Debsweb—with a cross-post of her article at Big Brass Blog—blogger Debra tore into Mr. Will:
Oh George, please stop trying to pull the wool over our eyes. In the eighties I made more money than I do now and I had benefits. In the nineties I made minimum wage while studying for my Masters and was able to live on it. Not very well but I could survive and still go to the movies. Now I have said Masters and make more than minimum wage but I can't pay all my bills and I certainly can't attend the movies because the price of the ticket is ridiculously high. I can honestly say that the only thing that has increased in the last 25 years is my level of debt and my inability to pay it off. It isn't that I'm still paying for a meal that I ate in 1989, I'm paying for the schooling that was supposed to improve my ability to earn money but is instead an anchor pulling me to the bottom of the debt sea.
Indeed, Debra hit squarely on one of several curious features of the economic wonder of the past two-and-a-half decades: while the economy has grown with only modest and rare recessionary downturns, the living standards of millions and millions of American households have eroded, and they have done so noticeably, certainly to the occupants of those households, who know very well that they were living better earlier in their lives, and they were doing so without incurring a mounting pile of debt.

The graphic below, drawn from Household Debt Service and Financial Obligations Ratios data provided by the Federal Reserve Board, shows the legacy of rising monthly total debt service obligation under which Americans have been laboring in the modern era.

Household Debt Service Ratio

The sense among so many of losing economic ground is given quantitative evidence in the graphic below, derived from average annual hourly earnings data provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and consumer price indices offered by the Minnesota Federal Reserve. It shows that, while "nominal" hourly wages—the wages workers see, with no correction for inflation—have risen steadily for a very long time, real wages (wages corrected for the purchasing power erosion of inflation) have been pretty much stagnant.

Real and Nominal Average Hourly Wages

The two visual depictions above, taken together, go a long way toward explaining the feeling among many Americans that their shared economic situation has been deteriorating: purchasing power has gone nowhere, but the percentage of that stagnant purchasing power committed to paying fixed bills every month has gone up and up.

The graphic below depicts more strikingly, if a bit more complexly, the difference in changes in real and nominal wages that have been going on. It shows not the levels of real and nominal wages, but how those real and nominal wages have changed as percentages from one year to the next over the past several decades.

Year-over-Year Percentage Changes in Real and Nominal Average Hourly Wages

Note in particular in the graphic above how the year-to-year percentage changes in real average hourly wages have pretty much canceled each other out over a long period of time, meandering with a seeming aimlessness around the zero-percent axis.

How could it be that the labor force propelling an economy to ever-greater real value would not share in that expanding pool of value? Is this evidence of the Marxist description of the controllers of capital systematically expropriating the fruits of labor from those who render it; or is it perhaps some late-20th Century plot whereby the government has participated in an alliance with the wealthy to ensure a more and more unequal distribution of income to the end of destroying the ability of average citizens to live their lives independent of some over-arching government entity providing all their needs for them?

Such possibilities must be left to those more attuned to the nuances of conspiracy theories and all the many forms and supposed proofs thereof. Practically speaking, the explanation is somewhat simpler, although perhaps no less troubling; but a few background terms and concepts must first be set forth.

"Factors of production" are the things needed to turn raw materials into final products. At least for pedagogic purposes, there are five: land, labor, human capital, physical capital, and entrepreneurial skill.

Land is the physical platform on which production occurs. Although extraordinary counter-examples might exist, virtually all production needs at least some land. It could be a lot, as in acres and acres on which are located horizontal assembly line factories; or it could be just enough on which to put a computer and a Webmaster to publish a backwater blog about economics.

Labor is brute human force, the kind of animal energy that simply moves physical objects. Often, the word "labor" is used broadly to encompass another factor listed above, human capital; but technically speaking, the two are different.

Human capital is the transformed, refined, developed, educated result of labor resulting from its natural (and, to some extent, entirely unconscious) tendency for improvement. Labor is always on the move to becoming human capital, whether it be through on-the-job learning, through personal trial-and-error development, or through education in school. Certainly, however, in most expositions the word "labor" includes the improved production factor technically defined as "human capital," and there's nothing wrong with that blurring of the distinction unless it becomes an unintended veil that hides an erosion of compensation to workers when their productivity is improving through their transformation of labor skills into human capital skills.

Physical capital is buildings, equipment, machinery, computers, telecommunications equipment, and all the other inanimate objects that are used in production.

Entrepreneurial skill is the factor of production characteristic of market economies or sub-economies. It is the factor of production that willingly (or perhaps unknowingly) bears risk for an expected reward by bringing together the other factors of production and combining them in such a way that some output is created.

So much for the factors of production. The next set of principles and definitions has to do with the paper used as a store of value, a medium of exchange, and a unit of account, as those features were set forth in Part 1 of "A Brief Story of Money" published here at The Dark Wraith Forums.

With respect to the matter of inflation and money, a rock-solid principle of economics is that inflation will necessarily result when the growth rate of the money supply exceeds the real growth rate of the economy. Inflation is not "caused" by money-grubbing merchants "jacking up their prices"; inflation is not caused by soul-depleted capitalists extracting larger and larger profits at the expense of consumers and workers; inflation is not caused by greedy unions demanding and then getting huge wage increases; and inflation is not caused by raising the minimum wage.

Not one of those things can cause inflation, which is defined as an increase in the aggregate (the "overall") price level. Any sector of the economy that tries to extract higher prices, be they for final goods or as rewards to one productive factor or another, can do so only to the pricing detriment of some other sector, unless too much money has been put into the system thereby allowing one sector to draw higher prices without others having to reduce their prices.

It is just about as simple as that. It might look very much like a price or wage increase has "caused" inflation, but that's only because the increase allowed the already over-printed money to express its presence through the aggregate price level. The rule, then, is straight-forward: when the growth rate of the money supply exceeds the real (physical) growth rate of the economy, in the long run, inflation will result. Part 2 of the series, "A Brief Story of Money" explained exactly how over-printing of money becomes inflation and provided a simple formula called the "equation of exchange" that mathematically captures the relationship among the critical factors, which are the size of the standing money supply, its velocity (how many times the money supply "turns over" per period in an economy), the aggregate price level, and the real output level of an economy.

Having stated the long-run consequence of over-printing money, it is crucial to point out that, in the short run, a money growth "overhang" can cause a punch of real economic stimulus, as was demonstrated in the aforementioned second part of "A Brief Story of Money." One necessary condition for this surge in real output to occur is that at least one factor of production—and it has to be a major factor—has to be incapable of capturing its share of the inflationary price spiral being caused by the money overhang. Such a factor unable to move its reward upward would be forced to create more real output to earn enough to pay the higher prices of everything else.

Guess what factor of production has historically borne this burden.

That's right: labor. As long as the growth of wages and salaries lags behind the inflation rate for everything else, workers have to work harder (more hours and at greater and greater productivity) to be able to maintain their established consumption patterns.

A persistent myth among the more well-informed students of economics has to do with the role of so-called "neo-Keynesian" economists of the last half of the 20th Century. John Maynard Keynes, the magnificent architect of the economics that inspired Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, knew very well that wages were "sticky." This is a persistent phenomenon because of the nature of labor retention by the businesses that hire workers. No worker's wage is adjusted on a day-by-day basis, and virtually no worker can instantly shift employment to capture a better wage if his or her present employer refuses to adjust wages to prevailing price conditions and labor demand. In plain terms, workers are stuck, at least in the short term, in the jobs they're in; as such, they are stuck with the pay they've already negotiated until such time as they can either renegotiate through a normal contract renewal or through expending time and money in search of a better compensation package, if one even exists.

Neo-Keynesians, among the most notable of them such luminaries as John Kenneth Galbraith, envisioned a partnership of government and industry (perhaps what Eisenhower warned about as the infamous "military-industrial complex") that could keep a huge economy like that of the United States growing at an aggressive rate through fiscal policy intervention that might of necessity have periodic shots of overproduction of money. Notwithstanding Dr. Galbraith's claim that large unions would provide one aspect of a countervailing force against industrial economic and political power, this model simply cannot use over-production of money in its inventory of macroeconomic stimulators if unions were persistently powerful enough to keep wages rising in lock-step with other prices. Powerful, effective unions (in particular, the industrial ones) pose a show-stopping threat to the success of monetary economic stimulus because they have the potential to force wages to move at nearly the same growth rate, in nearly the same time frame as other prices (both final and factor), thereby absorbing for labor a "fair share" of the excess money being printed. Such a situation would wreck the way the over-printing of money could lead to actual, real growth of the economy, since it is only if wages and salaries are "sticky" that labor is forced to work more and harder to handle the price shocks pushing everything people buy upward.

The graphic below shows the nominal effect in terms of year-over-year percentage changes in the nominal average hourly wage rate and the associated percentage changes in real GDP.

Year-over-Year Percentage Changes in Nominal Average Hourly Wages and Real GDP

Upon careful inspection, the key feature reveals itself: nominal wage changes slide during the booms in real economic expansion, and then those nominal wage changes begin to capture better increases just in time for the Federal Reserve to clamp down on the money supply, throwing the economy into a downturn with layoffs and unemployment, thereby suppressing the nascent upsurge in nominal wages. In other words, when the American economy is in a growth phase, that's the most likely time the wages people are getting (their nominal, or "apparent" wages) are unable to capture their share of the growth. It's only when the booms are petering out that wages begin to get "unstuck," and by then, purchasing power erosion has already permanently corroded real living standards, thus pushing upon the workers in their consumption mode the incentive to draw higher debt loads to compensate.

Neo-Keynesians are not now, nor have they ever been, fools: they know very well, as do others, that Keynesian-style government intervention would have no real effect were the vast majority of well-paid workers to keep wages moving in rigid lock-step with other prices.

The same goes for the politics of the minimum wage, which cannot be raised very frequently, and certainly not one-for-one with true inflation, if over-production of money is to cause real economic growth. Minimum wage workers, like their better-paid union and middle-class white-collar brethren, must face an aggregate (overall) price level that is going up faster than their wages are, since "losing ground to inflation" will force them to work more hours and induce them to increase productivity in an effort to move to a higher wage bracket.

Were the minimum wage to rise in lock-step—say, month by month or even quarter by quarter—with the government-published consumer price index, the lowest-paid workers in this country would not have to work more hours and with greater productivity as other prices were rising because of the over-printing of money. Timely indexing of the minimum wage would defeat the whole purpose of government macroeconomic intervention, which in its correct design is to the purpose of generating real economic growth.

It is one of the great and continuing follies of business shills to claim that raising the minimum wage is "inflationary." In fact, the only thing that can cause inflation is printing money at a rate in excess of the real growth rate of the economy; all that happens if the minimum wage is raised is that the previous over-printing of greenbacks gets expressed fully throughout the matrix of productive factors instead of being restricted to only those under the direct control, and to the direct benefit, of business interests and the wealthy who can impose willful price rises through market power. This same rule applies to union wages, too: no inflation that was not already pending in the economy arises because of a new bargaining agreement that gives members a wage increase somewhere near the rate of inflation. In fact, no inflation not already seething below the surface would be "created" even if there were some extra compensation, because that component could very well be nothing more than a proactive payment for the expectation that prices will rise faster because wages are about to reflect labor's share of excessive growth of the money supply.

To claim that raising the statutory minimum or any other wage is "inflationary" is getting cause and effect exactly reversed. The inflation is already there; and to the extent that labor does not or cannot capture its share of the erosion of purchasing power with better pay, the economy experiences less inflation, but that's only because it is wages and salaries not moving upward quickly enough that keeps inflation from rising at the rate it otherwise would, given the rate at which money is being printed excessively.

As it is, wages and salaries really have been successfully and systematically suppressed over a long period of time, at least on average. This is arguably the principal reason the U.S. economy has grown so robustly in the post-World War II era.

The final graph, below, of this article shows the year-over-year percentage change in real GDP and real average hourly wages. It is remarkable for several reasons, one long-term, and one quite recent.

Year-over-Year Percentage Changes in Real Average Hourly Wages and Real GDP

Note first in the graphic above how, over the course of the past two decades or so, changes in real average hourly wages have moved in general synchrony with changes in real GDP; but almost always, the wage movements came after the associated GDP movements. The changes in real wages are, in effect, an echo of the changes in real GDP. That's the "unsticking" of the wages, as labor finally gets a piece of the action after at least some of the other factors of production have gotten their respective shares. Notice also in this same regard that the percentage changes in real wages go more deeply into negative territory (that means actual losses in real purchasing power) and never go more positive than the correlated real GDP rise on the upsides. That's why the economy can grow in real terms, yet leave people feeling further and further behind, relatively speaking.

And finally, in the graph above there is a short-term phenomenon that should be noted. It happened in the last half-decade or so. The relationship between the two lines is starkly different from what it was before. Notice how the echo of real wages from real GDP is completely gone. In fact, if anything, real wages have become an inverse echo of real GDP during the presidency of George W. Bush!

But the President and his Republican allies in Congress have certainly been nothing if not hard-core neo-Keynesians. Wildly large federal deficits year over year to spend on massive wars and other gargantuan pork; huge tax cuts; and a Federal Reserve Board that, by its own admission, was "accommodative" until mid-2004 and perhaps remained so long after claiming to rein in its overproduction of money. Those are purely Keynesian and neo-Keynesian macroeconomic policy prescriptions for government intervention to make an economy grow.

So what happened to the neo-Keynesian real wage echo effect? It's gone; or, at the very least, it's occurring far later than it had in the past. Either way, the corrosive effect that was always part of the lag between real economic growth and wages has become stronger because that lag has become longer. Why the echo has become either inverted or more perilously delayed will be explained in a subsequent installment of this series.


The Dark Wraith will now allow some time for readers to absorb what has just been presented.


Part One    Part Two    Part Three    Part Four


17:03:57 on 07/13/07 by Dark Wraith · Economics10 comments

Quoth the Dark Wraith

Oh! Oh! Read the story, but if you value your digestive sanity, DON'T LOOK AT THE PICTURE. Seriously, noobs, what has been seen cannot be unseen. This is what the government says public school children get to eat, for gawd's sake.

About the Forums

This blog offers Internet travelers a place where they can discuss economics, finance, politics, and other topics of scholarly and practical interest to thinking people. Your comments are always welcome, and your visits are most appreciated.

About the Publisher

The Dark WraithYour host of this Weblog is an award-winning college teacher and writer who specializes in economics, finance, mathematics, business administration, computer hardware and software skills, and English grammar and composition. His extensive writings on the history of the English language appeared on About.com in the avatar of the Selig Wraith in the Medieval History Forum. Under the umbrella of Dark Wraith Publishing, he now writes on economics and politics as the Dark Wraith, serving as editor and publisher of this online magazine, The Dark Wraith Forums, as well as the group Weblog Big Brass Blog and the blogScream News Wire service.

The Wraith Recommends

I appreciate this article: 4 Things Both Atheists and Believers Need to Stop Saying

Blog Marginalia

Worthy Websites

Other Life

Emergent Light Studio

Other Links



[Valid RSS]
Dynamic Drive
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional
Valid CSS
NucleusCMS
Nucleus CMS v3.24

Copyright