Re: Did someone say, ``Housing market recovery?''
ASH,
Actually you might rethink your view that inflation is a tax on the wealthy.
By any possible measurement technique, the wealthy own the majority of assets in this nation. More importantly, they own the assets with pricing power.
These are the ones which people cannot do without - but these are not the ones like residential property.
Given that there is a severe glut of residential property, the notion of construction cost being a factor in prices is completely wrong for the short term (3 years or so). Even disregarding the 'cramdown' of multiple households into single homes as well as the subdivision of McMansions, delay in kids leaving the nest, etc - the sheer number of excess homes is enough to make new construction irrelevant for quite some time.
But back to inflation: since the wealthy own that part of the economy which has pricing power, then in reality inflation hurts the middle class the most. Because the middle class owns assets but not the pricing power ones. Those who have fixed incomes also get hurt.
As for the Fed just taking on more in its balance sheet - that is purely a coping mechanism. Ultimately those supplying the US - China, GCCs, etc will still insist on some type of concrete payment.
Having a US dollar decline due to US government policy of printing like mad - again why would they send oil and goods? Is the US strong enough to exact outright tribute from these nations?
ASH,
Actually you might rethink your view that inflation is a tax on the wealthy.
By any possible measurement technique, the wealthy own the majority of assets in this nation. More importantly, they own the assets with pricing power.
These are the ones which people cannot do without - but these are not the ones like residential property.
Given that there is a severe glut of residential property, the notion of construction cost being a factor in prices is completely wrong for the short term (3 years or so). Even disregarding the 'cramdown' of multiple households into single homes as well as the subdivision of McMansions, delay in kids leaving the nest, etc - the sheer number of excess homes is enough to make new construction irrelevant for quite some time.
But back to inflation: since the wealthy own that part of the economy which has pricing power, then in reality inflation hurts the middle class the most. Because the middle class owns assets but not the pricing power ones. Those who have fixed incomes also get hurt.
As for the Fed just taking on more in its balance sheet - that is purely a coping mechanism. Ultimately those supplying the US - China, GCCs, etc will still insist on some type of concrete payment.
Having a US dollar decline due to US government policy of printing like mad - again why would they send oil and goods? Is the US strong enough to exact outright tribute from these nations?
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