Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Almost Back to Abby Normal

The following chart shows personal consumption of goods over services.

I can't speak for others, but I started buying a lot more stuff when the pandemic hit. Stuck at home, not much else to do. Some of that is seen in the chart and was directly responsible for the higher inflation rate in goods. Currently trying to wean myself off of this new temporary behavior.

There's something else going on too though, as seen in the upward slope of the red trend line channel. Here's one theory.

January 22, 2024
Study shows how social media fuels unhappiness and materialism

Clothes, cars, travel, followers: People with a materialistic mindset always want more and, above all, more than others. Social media provides them with ideal opportunities to compare themselves with others, which makes them susceptible to passive and addictive user behavior. This stresses them out and, ultimately, leads to low life satisfaction. This downward spiral, which turns materialists into less happy people, was identified by researchers from Bochum in an online survey of over 1,200 participants. They published their findings in the journal Telematics and Informatics Reports from January, 8, 2024.

10 comments:

Who Struck John said...

The pandemic led a lot of people to review their life situations and make drastic changes. Remote work meant moves to more suburban locations, and remodels for home offices. Many changed career fields, so some services (auto repair, for example) are hard to get. Not surprised to see the ratio so badly out of whack.

Stagflationary Mark said...

If my neighbors are any indication, landscaping services are doing okay. What was once a quiet suburban neighborhood, now has very loud heavy industrial gas-powered mowers and leaf blowers throughout the week, even in the winter when snow is on the ground. Progress, I guess. Sigh.

Mr Slippery said...

Out of college, money spent
See no future, pay no rent
All the money's gone
Nowhere to go

Torokunai said...

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1skg6

employment growth vs. population

it's my thesis that the +14M boomers flooding into the workforce in the late 70s was a large driver of the stagflation era that Volcker tried to fight.

Once they put Greenspan in they just decided to live with inflation + growth.

The only systemic risk I can see at this point, other than the 1% having all the money now, is US fiscal picture blowing up somehow, since we're entirely addicted to eye-watering %/GDP deficits now and it's only going to get worse as the boomers start drawing down the SSTF $2T+.

Fred said...

Are you like me and now scrambling for all the long-duration issues you can find ??

You put me onto TLT with your previous mention, I suck at investing so hadn't even thought of bonds like that.

I regret going to Japan last October man, I could have used that money to buy TLT at the low!

Stagflationary Mark said...

Still all in on TLT in my IRA. Hasn’t been a great investment for me until this year though. Bought too early. No desire to change course now.

So much talk about inflation, but only inflated balloons can pop. Deflated balloons just sit there.

Not suggesting that deflation is a given, of course. However, can’t imagine the price of my home can have that much upside left, at least at these interest rates.

Torokunai said...

Back around 2006 when CR turned me onto following Fed stuff, I remember seeing the tables of how many 18% 30 year bonds were still around and wishing I had some of those : ) Somebody on CR also mentioned the 'uncallable' WFC-PL and BAC-PL, these are still around but like putting your money in the bank pre-FDIC LOL . . .

On FRED, graphing corporate profits on a log scale does give one pause. I kinda think everything is perfectly priced now, more or less. Buying TLT this past month seems like easy money, but nothing is certain!

Mr Slippery said...

I also bought some TLT in December and got out a few months later with a small loss. I had some bonds mature last week and I put all of it and more into VGLT. I am back in the deep end of the pool now.

Stagflationary Mark said...

I am becoming less certain as time goes on, but perhaps for good reason. Entropy increases with time.

Our political and economic systems both seem much more chaotic since I started this blog in 2007, a time when I was also very concerned that too many assets were priced for perfection.

Stagflationary Mark said...

TLT certainly isn’t priced for perfection now. In hindsight, that happened in July of 2020 @ $171 per share.

Doesn’t mean, at its current price of just $101, that it can’t still get a whole lot more imperfect from here.

I hope not though.

1. My IRA is filled with it.
2. Million dollar homes and ever-rising mortgage rates are not at all compatible. Can’t imagine the damage that would do to our economy.