calbear93 said:
DiabloWags said:
Cal_79 said:
This reminded me of the interesting conversation we had back in February of last year before there was any inflation or supply chain constraints (although my friends were already telling me back then that supply chain will be an issue, especially with chips). I may have called the inflation and supply chain issues a few months early (still glad for the rotation to energy and cyclicals) but even back then, it was pretty interesting how people suspend common sense and ignore insight from people who actually have life experiences but instead choose to abstract theory and google posting that go against common sense and real life results.
https://bearinsider.com/forums/6/topics/100562/replies/1852155
I just want to say that I loved this discussion by Diablo, WIAF and Unit2. I would not be surprised if life successes reflected level of common sense and actual market understanding and vice versa.
Good job, fellas.
Thank You Calbear93.
I would whole-heartedly agree with your primary point about
Quantitative Easing (QE) having turbo-charged the wealth inequality gap.
While people can make a case (as
Dajo has) that the wealth gap has expressed itself in wage growth not keeping up with productivity growth (which can be graphically illustrated since the mid-70's, but much more so since the advent of the computer age in the early 90's), - - - it's so obvious to me that QE has been behind the basis for this wealth gap given what I do in every day life that I perhaps take it for granted that
everyone understand this.
The bottom line, is that when you inject
LIQUIDITY into the financial markets, people are more willing to take on RISK and there is what we call TINA which leads to FOMO. For those unaware, TINA = There is no alternative. FOMO - Fear of missing out.
Remember, the stock market is not a reflection of how well the economy is doing. It's a discounted cash-flow machine and it's performance is much more dependent on how much
LIQUIDITY is in the system, and the
perceptions of that liquidity increasing or decreasing in the system.Wealth for the average American is largely driven by the house that they own, especially in places like California where the economy is tremendously diverse and there is a hot-bed of game-changing technology companies like Silicon Valley. When you have more and more educated, highly trained workers attracted to innovative growing companies in geographic areas with a limited supply of housing AND interest rates near zero, is it any surprise that the housing market explodes higher along with wealth?
But where the Middle Class and lower economic classes wind up getting themselves into trouble, is that many of these families also have much higher debt levels. Higher mortgages to repay, much higher consumer credit, and student loans to service than ever before, etc. - - - which means less cash on hand to invest in the financial markets.
When you get a "pop" in the housing market (like in 2007) these economic classes see their "wealth" get crushed and their wealth doesnt recover until the real estate market does; and invariably there may also be job loss in the family that also compounds the inability of their household wealth to rebound.. As a result, the average "wealth" of the bottom 90% in 2012 ($80,000) several years after the Great Recession of 2008-2009 winds up being the same as it was back in 1986 (wish I could post the chart of this). - - - In stark contrast, the wealth of the Top 10% is able to bounce back rather sharply after 2012 due to the equity markets rallying and an aggressive QE monetary policy by the FED.
This is the primary reason why our Golden State is enjoying a $75 Billion dollar budget surplus during an economic contraction and pandemic. The wealthy are highly educated skilled professionals that can work from home and are much more connected to the financial markets. State income tax in California is highly progressive, hence the record budget surplus.
Again, much of this can be linked to how the FED reacts to an economic contraction (with helicopter money) and massive injections of LIQUIDITY. Rates get reduced to zero and the entire system becomes a sea of liquidity. Anyone with available cash (the Top 10%) understands this and invests in the equity market. There simply is no alternative (TINA) when rates are this low. By default, the money goes into the stock market. As a result, the Top 10% sees their wealth increase dramatically and the bottom 90% unfortunately gets left behind.
It's a fascinating subject and I could probably spend hours and hours on this thread exploring all kinds of factors that have gone into creating such a massive wealth "gap". But the biggest driving factor for me is the FED.
The "globalized" Economy also comes to mind, as "outsourcing" by multi-national companies has injected another aspect of how cheaper labor is used outside of the United States. It is this "globalization" that has most likely crippled the (previous) power of labor unions and resulted in stagnant wage growth for the average American - - - even for those that were in middle management type positions. Case in Point: I have a friend here in the East Bay that retired from Chevron. A De LaSalle and Cal Poly alum, he was in charge of all accounting for state excise taxes on fuel. His accounting group used to be based off of Diamond Way in Concord. It wasnt too long before that group was eventually "outsourced" to Argentina/Chile because the payroll costs were 30 - 35% cheaper. - - - Dont even get me started on automation!
We could go on and on for hours.
But I really believe that one cant honestly talk about the wealth gap without highlighting the (change) in monetary policy by the Federal Reserve and an expanded use of their monetary tools over the last 15 years.