It’s Not Technology but the Fed That Is Taking Away Jobs
Economics / Employment May 16, 2019 - 03:04 PM GMTBy: John_Mauldin
   You’ve likely heard of the term  “income inequality.” It  means wealthy people are making a larger share of our collective income.
You’ve likely heard of the term  “income inequality.” It  means wealthy people are making a larger share of our collective income.
  In  one sense, it’s nothing new. The people with the highest incomes have more of  the total. Math guarantees it.
  But  the top’s share has largely grown in recent decades, as has the share of assets  owned by the wealthiest.
  In  fact, Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates says that income inequality is now at  the same level it was in the Great Depression.
Let’s  review some charts from my friend Bruce Mehlman’s latest fascinating slide  deck. It does a good job of explaining the drivers of this trend and its  striking scale.
The State of Income Inequality
If  you take GDP as a gauge for national income, it’s been growing far faster than  median family income—even adjusted for inflation. The wider that gap gets, the  more people feel left behind.
  
  Source: Bruce Mehlman 
  Here’s  another one comparing stock market growth and family net worth. This isn’t  really surprising since the top quintile owns most of the stocks. The lower 80%  see little direct benefit. But the magnitude of the disparity is still  remarkable.
  
  Source: Bruce Mehlman
Income Inequality Drivers
One  reason income may be unequal is that talent is unequal, too. Or at least the  willingness of businesses to buy talent.
  Here’s  a chart showing the most valuable companies have been getting that way with a  smaller headcount.
  
  Source: Bruce Mehlman 
  Mehlman  thinks the reason is technology, and I agree that’s a big part of it. But so  are other things.
  For  one, there’s a growing number of monopolies  whose existence is enabled by financial engineering and monetary policy. 
  My  good friend Ben Hunt of Epsilon Theory notes that the S&P 500 companies  have the highest earnings relative to sales in history.
  Quoting  Ben:
  This is a 30-year chart of total S&P 500 earnings divided by  total S&P 500 sales. It’s how many pennies of earnings S&P 500  companies get from a dollar of sales… earnings margin, essentially, at a high  level of aggregation. So at the lows of 1991, $1 in sales generated a bit more  than $0.03 in earnings for the S&P 500. Today in 2019, we are at an  all-time high of a bit more than $0.11 in earnings from $1 in sales. 
  It’s a marvelously steady progression up and to the right,  temporarily marred by a recession here and there, but really quite  awe-inspiring in its consistency. Yay, capitalism! 
  Ben  goes on to say many people think that is because of technology. He argues it is  the financialization of our economy and the Fed’s loose policies. 
  I  agree 100%. If you think they haven’t changed the rules since the 1980s and  1990s, you aren’t paying attention, boys and girls!
  As  unhappy as all this is making people now, imagine how it will be when recession  hits. And  then couple that with an ever-increasing explosion of new technologies that  reduce demand for many types of labor (like automated driving).
No Solutions
Some  degree of unhappiness and discontent is part of the human condition. It’s what  drives us to improve.
  But  we accept challenges as long as we think we have a fair chance of overcoming  them. Many Americans no longer believe they have that chance.
  That’s  partly because they have higher expectations—possibly too high. But right or  wrong, the perception is there. It affects behavior. And more to the point, it  affects what people expect from the government.
  When  they perceive less ability to reach the next level on their own, they look to  Washington for help.
  But  there’s little politicians can do. Raising taxes on the wealthy won’t get us even close to  a balanced budget, even at confiscatory levels. Raising taxes on the middle  class won’t happen in a recession.
  A  value-added tax is the only program that has a shot at actually paying for  current spending, but it’s anathema to both parties.
  No  matter how I look at this, I keep coming back to  gigantic deficits that the Federal Reserve will have to monetize in some  fashion.
  It  will probably pursue something like the previous QE rounds but on a vastly  larger scale. This will likely lead to an era  of Japan-like deflation and economic doldrums.
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