Yes, our present suite of indicator statistical measures has been awful for years and those in need have all been forced to find what we can describe as check measures to confirm or deny what appears on the surface.
The worst example has been the steady gaming of the consumer price index which appears to become immovable while every consumers grocery basket rises upward through ever sort of merchandising game one can imagine.
You have to understand that supply management is in force on just about every imaginable commodity out there. The sellers set the price to optimize their profit, not their throughput at all and then squeeze producers to lower material prices. The only real competition comes from product displacement.
No one complains about this cozy arrangement unless it is the producers themselves who set it all up.
By Henry Bonner (HBonner@sprottglobal.com)
Mark Skousen authored The Structure of Production,
a best-seller about economics. A Presidential Fellow at Chapman
University, he is also a long-time friend of Rick Rule, who has
recommended his book to many of his clients and friends. In Structure,
Skousen makes the case that modern economists downplay the importance
of the business sector in the economy, and overstate the importance of
consumer spending. In particular, he believes that the GDP should not be
used as a sole measure of economic activity.
In his book, Mark argues that a
more accurate picture of the economy is provided by another statistic,
gross output. Gross output includes investments made by businesses in
order to produce their goods, such as capital outlays on new equipment,
raw materials, or other business-to-business transactions.
Over two decades after The Structure of Production was
published, The Bureau of Economic Research recently announced it would
calculate and publish official numbers for gross output on a quarterly
basis, on the same level as GDP.
In a recent phone conversation,
Mark described this event as “probably the greatest personal triumph of
my lifetime,” adding, “This will have a very big effect on our current
understanding of economics and investing.”
In a lead editorial in the Wall Street Journal Online1, Mark explains why he argued for the admission of GO as an official measure of the economy alongside GDP:
Why
pay attention to gross output? For starters, research I published in
1990 shows it does a better job of measuring total economic activity.
GDP is a useful measure of a country's standard of living and economic
growth. But its focus on final output omits intermediate production and
as a result creates much mischief in our understanding of how the
economy works.
In
particular, it has led to the misguided Keynesian notion that consumer
and government spending drive the economy rather than saving, business
investment, technology and entrepreneurship. GDP data at the end of 2013
put consumer spending first in importance (68% of GDP), followed by
government expenditures (18%), and business investment third (16%). Net
exports (-2%) makes up the difference.
Thus
journalists and many economic analysts report that "consumer spending
drives the economy." And they focus on retail spending or consumer
confidence as the critical factors in driving the economy and stock
market. There is an underlying anti-saving mentality in this analysis,
as evidenced by statements frequently made during debates on tax cuts or
tax rebates that if consumers save their tax refund instead of spending
it, it will do no good for the economy. Presidents including George W.
Bush and Barack Obama have echoed this sentiment when they encouraged
consumers to spend rather than save and invest their tax refunds.
Although
consumer spending accounts for about 70% of GDP, if you use gross
output as a broader measure of total sales or spending, it represents
less than 40% of the economy. The reality is that business
outlays—adding capital investment and all business spending in
intermediate stages of the supply chain—are substantially larger than
consumer spending in the economy. They make up more than 50% of economic
activity.
Mark also points out a second advantage to using gross output in an opinion piece in Forbes Online2: it is more volatile and shows recessions and economics booms more distinctly:
GO is
significantly more sensitive to the business cycle. During the 2008-09
Great Recession, nominal GDP fell only 2% (due largely to
countercyclical increases in government), but GO collapsed by over 7%,
and intermediate inputs by 10%. Since 2009, nominal GDP has increased
3-4% a year, but GO has climbed more than 5% a year.
As Mark points out, when you
look at GDP numbers, consumer spending occupies the biggest slice of
economic activity. In contrast, looking at total spending within the
economy measured by gross output, businesses take up the biggest portion
of economic activity.
On the phone recently, Mark explained why the inclusion of gross output was a victory for “supply-side” economics:
“To properly understand the
economy, we need to know how much businesses are spending to create
goods, but that number is not included in the GDP, which only counts how
much money is spent to buy goods and services that have been through
all the stages of production – like hammers, books, dishwashers, or a
cleaning service.
“The dispute over what matters
more – consumer spending or business outlays, which is to say spending
and consuming or saving and investing – has gone on for decades.
Figureheads of the intellectual debate include John Maynard Keynes on
the one side, advocating that growth is driven by demand, against the
Austrian school, featuring Friedrich Hayek, who argued that production
drove economic booms, not consumer demand.
“GDP tells you that consumer
spending drives economic growth, but it doesn’t. Higher consumer
spending is the effect of economic growth, not the cause. The true
source of growth is investments in the stages of production to improve
the quality and quantity of goods and services being produced.
“Because gross output gives a
better overall view of the economy, I believe this will usher in a whole
new era of economic research, and I believe it will help to restore the
importance of savings and investments over consumption and spending.”
Rick
Rule has been a long-term supporter of Mark’s push to include gross
output in official statistics. He frequently recommends Mark’s book The Structure of Production
as foundational literature that does a great job of explaining the
volatility associated with early stages of production, in particular
natural resources.
P.S.: Our inaugural symposium
(by Sprott US Media) is right around the corner. I strongly urge you to
consider attending this unique event. Our special extended early-bird
pricing expires June 15th. Click here to read more, or to register now click here.
1 At Last, a Better Economic Measure. The Wall Street Journal Online. April 22, 2014
No comments:
Post a Comment