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Inflation Disinformation
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By Richard Benson
December 30, 2004
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Now that the Pentagon has won the domestic war
over the United States’ intelligence services, our blinders
have been removed and we are allowed to see the real reason
that the Pentagon wants to control intelligence: to run “disinformation”
campaigns against America’s enemies around the world.
If our military industrial complex is serious about understanding
disinformation, they should become students again and participate
in a case study to learn how to get disinformation right.
The Federal Reserve has done a masterful job
of distributing disinformation. Last year, they were scaring
Americans by announcing that deflation was a threat. This
year, they continue to announce “inflation is contained”
so interest rates can be raised at a “measured pace”.
The Federal Funds Rate has moved up from 1 percent to 2.25
percent while the CPI has risen from 2 percent to 3.5 percent!
The real interest rate – the Federal Funds Rate less
inflation – remains clearly negative. “Loose as
a goose” as in continuing to “goose the money
supply” might be a good analogy. Meanwhile, everyone
is fighting deflation and totally focused on the core inflation
rate, which is running at about 2 percent. The reason the
core rate goes up so slowly is because it is carefully designed
to leave out the key expenses that really affect our lives
and go up in price such as energy costs, food, and housing.
The essence of disinformation is basically to get everyone
to look the other way when something like inflation is really
big and in your face constantly.
Critically, the mainstream press has been a
big help to the Fed in this endeavor. For the most part, they
simply print what they are told without doing any factual
digging or additional research, or actually examining the
“real” inflation numbers. When the Fed claims
that all that matters is the core rate, you really need to
go to the BLS and find out what the year-over-year rate is.
Price increases are downright ugly and the last thing the
government wants you to do is take a closer look.
Well, let’s peek anyway at some of the
government’s numbers on prices, courtesy of the Bureau
of Labor Statistics (“BLS”):
| Price Increase |
| November 2003 to November 2004 |
| Producer Price Index (“PPI”) |
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Gasoline |
47.5 percent |
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Crude Materials |
25.9 percent |
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Intermediate Materials |
9.7 percent |
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Groceries at Supermarket |
6.1 percent |
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Finished Goods |
5.1 percent |
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| Consumer Price Index (“CPI”) |
3.5 percent |
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| Benson’s Economic &
Market Trends, December 28, 2004 Page 1 of 3 |
Price Increase
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight “OPHEO”
National Housing Prices
Third Quarter ’03 to Third Quarter
’04 ------------------13 percent
Third Quarter ’04 Annual Rate ----------------------------18.5
percent
The prices above surely indicate there is a
whole lot of inflation going on now and in the “price
pipeline”. The magnitude of real inflation is around
us everywhere. An example of this could be seen in New York
where taxi cab prices increased by 25 percent, while nationwide
college tuition, health care, insurance, drug prices and property
taxes are, in most cases, running near or above double digit
annual rates of price increase.
So, why does the CPI rate of increase look so
low? Ah, the genius of disinformation. First, many of the
items going into the CPI are adjusted for quality changes,
referred to as hedonic adjustment. The idea is that since
a new computer has twice the memory and processing speed for
the same amount of money, the price actually fell in half.
Even Bill Gross at PIMCO has caught on to this hedonic scam
and estimates that these convenient but false hedonic adjustments
pull the CPI down a full percentage point from where it would
otherwise be.
However, our favorite disinformation trick in
the CPI is the grand assumption that everyone in America rents
their house. In calculating the CPI, a full 29.5 percent of
the index is related to the direct costs of housing. Looking
at the price weights, 6.2 percent of this fraction relates
to people who rent, while 23.4 percent of the total CPI relates
to the total costs associated with home ownership but the
CPI assumes these homeowners rent, not own! As you can imagine,
rents have not been moving up as fast as housing prices. If
the national housing prices as published by OFHEO were used
in the CPI, that 23.4 percent weight of the index for prices
rising at 13 percent a year would alone have added 3 percent
to the CPI (that is if gasoline, groceries, and everything
else had not increased in price and only rising housing prices
were affecting it).
What is the “real” CPI? If we assume
that housing prices are only increasing at three times the
rate of the cost of renting, and the hedonic adjustment is
only 0.5 percent, I think we can safely assume the following:
| Real Consumer Price Index |
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| Reported |
3.5 percent |
| Including Housing Prices |
2.0 percent |
| Hedonic (fudge factor) |
0.5 percent |
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| Real Consumer Inflation |
6.0 percent |
| Benson’s Economic &
Market Trends, December 28, 2004 |
In looking at these numerical facts and
the actual world around us, we can truly appreciate the magnitude
of disinformation on the inflation front. The Fed needs inflation,
wants inflation, and is getting inflation. Without inflation
to inflate away a massive amount of personal, corporate, and
government debt, our financial system could collapse. A lower
dollar and higher inflation will ease the federal deficit
while the foreign central banks, that have purchased U.S.
Treasuries, will end up paying for the war in the Mid East
as America’s debt is inflated away. To make the disinformation
plan work, it is critical that even if inflation is not contained,
the knowledge and perception that inflation is kicking up,
is contained.
Unfortunately for savers, they are being slaughtered by inflation
very silently but at least they are alive to work like a wage
slave for another day. The average American is so busy trying
to make ends meet that when it comes to inflation, they don’t
even know what’s happening. We can only hope that the
Pentagon will learn from the masters at the Fed how to have
that soft touch when it comes to propaganda.
******
Richard Benson
President
Specialty Finance Group LLC
Member NASD/SIPC
www.sfgroup.org
800-860-2907
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