Economy

Inflation Is Painful, But the Fed Shouldn’t Overreact – Discourse

Inflation Is Painful, But the Fed Shouldn’t Overreact – Discourse

For the past several months, Americans have felt the pain of higher inflation as they spend more on items ranging from food to gasoline to used cars to housing. Many observers wonder whether the inflation is being caused by the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates low and buying up lots of government debt or by supply chain disruptions and other production bottlenecks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. If it’s the former, then the Fed will need to tighten monetary policy to get inflation under control. If it’s the latter, though, the recent uptick in prices will dissipate on its o

NPR

How a shortage of glass is helping drive inflation higher : NPR

Here's another unexpected example of how supply chains have been upended by the pandemic: Glass bottles used for everything from vinegar to pasta sauces are getting tied up in their own bottlenecks. That's driving prices higher, when you can get the bottles at all.

Just like many other industries struggling to secure supplies, producers of pasta sauce and high-end spirits are seeing the glass used in their humble containers tied up in massive cargo jams, and that's forcing them to either absorb the higher costs or pass them on to consumers.

I am no fan of glass, usually because it's heavy and I'm prone to break it. I try to get everything in paper or plastic (which I can burn), or at least metal cans that can be flattened and saved for the yearly trip to the recycling center. But it's just another problem with inflation that we are facing.

I was looking at money market accounts after reading this book promoting them.

I was looking at money market accounts after reading this personal finance book I’m reading promoting them for short term savings. 🏦

With current low interest rates there really is no real difference – the FDIC insured online only savings account I have is 0.15% below that of most of the money market accounts out there and I’d have to deal with another bank. Online only savings accounts aren’t far behind money market accounts – it’s not like the 1970s. My grandmother thought money market accounts were the best thing back in the day, maybe they were compared to CDs at the her local bank.

That said, I do seriously need to think about buying more bonds as I’m getting older and with recent market growth too heavily in the stock market. I’ve been watching the stock side of things creep up disproportionately as stocks grow so much faster over the past few years compared to everything else – despite my efforts to try to keep things balanced. I have too much on both extremes and not nearly enough in the happy middle known as bonds.

With the market probably heading straight for the crapper, now isn’t probably the best time to buy bonds but I’m not planning to sell stocks but going forward I’m leaning towards getting more bond funds during routine buys and maybe moving some money out savings towards individual bonds. I can’t imagine that a CD or savings account with such low interest rates would out preform bonds over the medium term and I have in excess of what I need for a rainy day in savings.

Life was so much easier when I started out and interest rates were around 5%. But alas the fed is holding down rates to stimulate the economy.

At the end of the day I don’t think much about money, but I do think about the mud and manure of farm life, homesteading, having my own land, more guns and toys and the off grid property. I don’t want to have to work my job downtown and live in my crappy, rundown little apartment in the city forever.

How saving gets me high πŸ’°

How saving gets me high πŸ’°

I do automatic savings every paycheck. Have done it for years – about half for retirement and half in more mid-term and short-term investments. I don’t really care money alone, for me it’s a means to that off-grid home and farm, my own land where I can have whatever guns I want and  burn barrels for trash and a wood stove. Produce my own electricity with solar. Compost and feed waste. Land that is my own, that I can manage for ecological diversity, hunting and trapping, livestock like pigs and goats for food. And that’s a vision that gets me high with a little dopamine hot every time I get that notice in the email. 

With Guests Shannon Miller and Hal Hershfield

Big Goals, Little Steps: With Guests Shannon Miller and Hal Hershfield



8/16/21 by Shannon Miller, Katy Milkman, Hal Hershfield

Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/127141869
Episode: https://chtbl.com/track/224G4/https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/cdn.simplecast.com/audio/46d9ff78-39b5-4502-a5e9-0df217e1b3a7/episodes/3f815c56-dde7-4e12-b24a-762353a4dea6/audio/c5ff2e50-a324-4b84-9d8d-fd247c173be3/default_tc.mp3

Most people wouldn’t attempt a marathon or a climb up Mount Everest without first working through some less audacious objectives. And yet there are countless examples of ambitious goalsβ€”new businesses, academic degrees, career changes, athletic featsβ€”that were abandoned because they appeared too daunting in scope. In this episode of Choiceology with Katy Milkman, we look at a simple strategy that can make your biggest goals more manageable. Shannon Miller is one of the most decorated athletes in the history of gymnastics. She is a seven-time Olympic medalist, and two-time inductee into the US Olympic Hall of Fame. While her ambitions as a young gymnast included competing at national and international events, she learned early on that achieving those lofty goals would require many small steps along the way. You’ll hear how Shannon Miller’s approach to goals led her to the pinnacle of her sport, and also helped her through a devastating illness. You can read more about Shannon Miller’s challenges and triumphs in her memoir, It’s Not About Perfect: Competing for my Country and Fighting for My Life. Next, Hal Hershfield joins Katy to explore how breaking your savings goals into smaller amounts and shorter intervals can help you overcome certain psychological hurdles. He also discusses scenarios where smaller monetary increments may not actually be in your best interest. Hal Hershfield is an Associate Professor of Marketing, Behavioral Decision Making, and Psychology at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management.

Whatever Happened to Six Sigma?

Whatever Happened to Six Sigma?

Six Sigma’s decline was also a symptom of a broader change in the corporate world, where innovation became more valued than efficiency, and technical precision was no longer a differentiator. Silicon Valley’s culture of “move fast and break things” meant business leaders were less concerned with reliability and more focused on game-changing discoveries. An obsession with efficiency, researchers have discovered (pdf), can come at the expense of invention.

“When I get up on an airplane, I’m very glad it went through a Six Sigma process—there’s a certain comfort in that,” says Mike Pino, a technology strategist at PwC who spent three years at GE. But at organizations built around Six Sigma, he says, “disruptive innovation is discouraged.”