On 10/9/13 9:48 AM, Robert Naiman wrote:
> Woot! Another victory over the Rubin-Summers cabal. Keep interest rates
> low until measured unemployment is 4%!
>
> http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/budget/327359-obama-to-nominate-yellen-as-federal-reserve-chief
>

http://www.newstatesman.com/business/2013/09/quantitative-easing-has-rigged-market-boosting-company-profits

New Statesman
Quantitative easing has rigged the market, boosting company profits

We can't go on like this...
By Stewart Cowley
Published 19 September 2013

In the history of industrial relations the clash between workers and 
management has always come down to: "How can we be paid more for less 
work?". This applies to both sides of the employment divide. The 
Tolpuddle Martyrs, the first union members, were created out of a strike 
to prevent a pay cut and ever since then all industrial disputes have 
had at their heart wages and hours worked.

Karl Marx recognized the conflict and condensed it into the 
"‘Exploitation Rate" which essentially asks the question: ‘How many 
hours a day does it take for capitalism to make a profit?’ The more 
hours a day that a capitalist extracts from each worker in excess of 
what is needed to cover the cost of production, the greater the 
Exploitation Rate. Capitalists seek to maximize it, workers seek to 
minimize it.

At least conceptually the Exploitation Rate is a useful way to frame 
your thoughts around the relationship between capital and labour. But 
also it’s actually possible to get an idea how it has changed over time 
especially since the onset of the recent financial crisis. Using 
averages of hours worked, people employed and the profits made by US 
companies as a whole you can get a handle on the time at which, on each 
working day, on average, America begins to make a profit. In 2006 it was 
about 12:30pm. But since then it has dropped to about 11:45am which 
might not sound like very much but in the context of the working day it 
is an 8 per cent increase in the Exploitation Rate.

This effect has allowed American companies to start pumping out profits 
even in the midst of one of the worse recessions that the Western world 
has ever seen – the stock market has risen by over 90 per cent since its 
2009 trough, while real wages have increased by only about 1.5 per cent. 
Workers now work longer and for less and the divisions between capital 
and labour have increased.

We have a terrible tendency to believe that everything in economics 
reverts back to some kind of historic norm. This isn’t surprising given 
that our experience confirms this; all recessions are mere blips and 
normal service can be expected to resume after a brief period of time 
and we return to a path of enduring and rising prosperity. But something 
has changed in our economies; the nature of employment is fragile – 
underemployment through increased part-time working, zero-hour contracts 
and no-pay internships have fundamentally reduced the bargaining power 
of labour. Rising pay isn’t going to be the thing that starts to reduce 
the Exploitation Rate.

So, if the Exploitation Rate is going to decline again, the only thing 
left is an increase in company costs. Western economies (particularly 
the US and UK) have benefited from ultra-low interest rates since 2008. 
Long-term borrowing costs have been kept low by the use of 
unconventional monetary policies like quantitative easing (QE). The 
markets have, effectively, been rigged in favour of stock owners and 
corporate bond borrowers and to the disadvantage of savers who receive a 
fixed income from the bond markets. It’s another factor that has 
increased the Exploitation Rate as interest payments haven’t eaten into 
profits.

But this is set to change. The UK has stopped its QE program and the US 
is seeking an exit strategy from their Gargantuan pump-priming policy. 
So if there is a threat to company profits, and by extension the stock 
markets going forwards, it comes from the right-sizing of bond yields 
and not from the pay demands of workers.

To reinforce this, the shock decision by Larry Summers to withdraw as a 
candidate for the top slot at the Federal Reserve caused bond yields to 
fall, the US dollar to weaken and stock markets to rally. Summers had 
been associated with stopping the process of QE earlier than his rival, 
the current deputy chair Janet Yellen. The episode only serves to 
reinforce the idea that we have a set of asset classes hopelessly 
dependent on the continuation of a policy that serves no purpose other 
than to perpetuate a collective desire to avoid reality. If I was Larry 
Summers I’d be pretty happy right now – at least I won’t now go down in 
history as the guy who bust the stock market.



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