navigating the second Gilded Age through humor, invective and insight

“Just because you don’t know anybody from the right-hand side of the bell curve doesn’t mean they’re not there”

CPI and Unemployment

Both data series are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The CPI is for all urban consumers1 and is not seasonally adjusted.

The unemployment rate is seasonally adjusted.

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The Federal Reserve’s charter requires that it pursue monetary policy so as to minimize both inflation and unemployment.

In my experience, that’s not what the Fed actually does. Instead, it defaults to worrying more about inflation than unemployment. I think you can see that bias in the time frame covered by the chart.

The bias, if it exists, has a simple political explanation. Inflation affects everybody, but unemployment concentrates most of its effects on a fraction of the population. That makes concern about inflation more powerful, politically, than unemployment…so long as the average person continues to be more concerned about their own welfare than those of their unemployed fellow community members.


  1. and includes food & energy components, despite their volatility 

His Imperial Majesty Speaks!

mostly incoherently, but still…

Trump commenting on his brilliant move to supply more water in California:

“Today, 1.6 billion gallons and, in 3 days, it will be 5.2 billion gallons. Everybody should be happy about this long fought Victory! I only wish they listened to me six years ago — There would have been no fire!”

Unfortunately:

  • the increased flow is likely to simply cause flooding;
  • the released water is normally held back to irrigate crops during California’s hot, dry summer; and,
  • local farmers and officials are really, really pissed about this.

But who cares about farmers?