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INFLATION
INDEX MANIPULATION:
Theft By Statistics
by Daniel
R. Amerman, CFA
the-great-retirement-experiment.com
December
18, 2007
Overview
If
the United States government was an individual or corporation, and we
looked at the obligations it has entered into for the decades ahead –
it would be bankrupt. However, the federal government is not an
individual or corporation, and has powers that make these bankruptcy
analogies quite dangerous for investors who take them to heart. Thinking
the United States may go bankrupt means focusing on a danger that
isn’t real, while missing the dangers that are real – which are the
methods the government can use to avoid bankruptcy, and the devastating
impact of those methods upon retirees, salaried workers and many
investment strategies.
The
government’s effective immunity from bankruptcy can be found in two
separate but related governmental powers: 1) the government controls the
money supply, meaning it controls the degree of inflation (in broad
terms); and 2) the government also controls the official inflation
indexes. Many people are aware that there will likely be a major squeeze
coming up that means future beneficiaries will receive much less than
current beneficiaries in purchasing power terms. The contribution of
this article is to flesh out how the specifics can work, and demonstrate
how through steady and somewhat hidden pressure, the value of promises
can be gradually stripped away even as a generation of retirees is
impoverished. We will use a fairly simple example based on two widely
known current inflation figures, to illustrate how through the
manipulation of both inflation and inflation indexes, the government can
simultaneously repay existing government obligations at 15 cents on the
dollar, while repaying inflation-protected promises (in full) at a mere
27 cents on the dollar.
Official & Real
Inflation Rates
To
explore how this process can work – and just how powerful the
government’s incentives are for manipulating inflation indexes – we
need to pick assumptions for index inflation and actual inflation. For
the index, we will use current official government statistics, and
compare the Consumer Price Indexes for October 2006 and October 2007.
The twelve month increase in price levels was almost exactly 3.0% (120.7
/ 117.2 = 1.0299, interim numbers as of 12/07).
When
we look at what has happened to the prices for food, energy, housing
prices and medical insurance over the last several years, there are many
Americans who are having trouble believing the government story of an
official 2%-3% per year. Therefore, for exploration and illustration
purposes, we will use a nice, round 10% assumption as the true rate of
inflation. John Williams of ShadowStats.com has made a case for this
figure being the true rate of inflation, when inflation is calculated
using the same methodologies that were used by the government in the 70s
and 80s.
A
belief that the government does or would systematically deceive its
citizens to serve political interests is incidental to this article. It
is up to the reader to decide whether we talking about what is happening
now – or what could be happening in the future. The numbers work the
same way whether the inflation and index-manipulation is openly
admitted, fraudulently hidden, obfuscated behind layers of statistical
complexity and technical jargon – or some combination thereof.
Slashing The Value Of
A Dollar

When
we combine the assumptions of an official index that grows at 3% per
year, while real inflation grows at a rate of 10% per year, then we get
the chart below.
A
sovereign nation dealing with excessive promises denominated in it’s
own currency does not face an impossible problem, and the solution is
not even a mystery – “print the money” as needed, which slashes
the value of the currency, and the magnitude of the problem is slashed
along with it (along with the value of the life savings of the
nation’s citizens, unfortunately, but such is the true nature of
currency). This government power to pay promises through inflation is
illustrated in the “Ending Real Value of a Dollar” (column 3). As
would be expected with a 10% rate of inflation, the value of a dollar
plunges. It is only worth 75 cents after three years, 50 cents within 7
years, and is down to only 15 cents by the end of 20 years. This
destruction of the value of the dollar is an entirely legal means of
reneging on the government’s debts, and effectively allows it to walk
away from ever paying for past deficit spending, both domestically and
internationally. Those massive trade deficits which were covered by
other nations buying US Treasury bonds will never likely be repaid, in
other words.
The “Impossible”
Part Of The Problem
The
“problem” from the government’s perspective with simply slashing
the value of the currency, is that it has been slashed before, the
citizens are aware this can happen, and many (though not all) retiree
benefits are inflation-indexed, along with (effectively) the incomes of
many millions of employees whose contracts are tied to the CPI. Making
the real value of a dollar worth a dime doesn’t help if all the wages
and benefits rise from a dollar to ten dollars in response.
The
government has a loophole when it comes to making inflation indexed
payments, however, and it is a massive loophole: there is no such thing
as a general inflation rate for a nation, it’s more of a theoretical
construct. An enormously complex theoretical construct that is highly
subjective, and even well-intentioned economists may vary substantially
in their estimate of what the effective rate of inflation is for a
nation. So much is dependent on the “basket” of goods and services
chosen to track, as well as the particular methodologies and assumptions
that go into the index itself. What we call the “inflation rate ”
then is therefore both quite subjective and subject to political
manipulation. Which is another way of saying that the true definition of
the inflation rate for government promises, is not about complex
economic calculations at all, rather, the index is whatever the
government says it is.
In
the chart above, we follow what happens when the government chooses to
interpret complex economic data in such a way that the official
inflation rate is 3%. When we look at the “Ending Government Index
Value Of A Dollar” (column 4), then we can see that the government
says that a dollar is worth 91 cents after three years, 81 cents after 7
years, and 55 cent at the end of 20 years. There is obviously quite a
difference between our real rate of inflation, and the official
government version, and that difference is shown in percentage terms in
column 5, “Benefit & Salary Reduction Via Index Manipulation”.
When
we look at year 1, we can see that the ending real value of a dollar is
90.9 cents – but the official government index says that a dollar is
worth 97.1 cents. The difference between the two is 6%, and that
represents the savings to the government from manipulating the inflation
index. Just to use round numbers, if the government owes $1,000 billion
($1 trillion) in inflation-indexed wages and Social Security payments,
when expressed in 2007 dollars, and the official government inflation
index for 2008 is 103, then the government pays $1,030 billion. However,
a dollar is actually only worth 90.9 cents (column 3), so what the
government pays out is only $936 billion in real (inflation-adjusted)
dollars ($1,030 X 90.9%), which is $64 billion less than what was
promised. In other words, the combination of using both inflation and a
manipulated inflation index allows the government to pay out what looks
like $30 billion more than the year before – and will appear to be $30
billion more in the newspapers, the budget and the checks disbursed –
but will actually be $64 billion less.
This
difference between the façade and the real then grows with each year.
Sticking with our example $1 trillion in 2007 dollars, by 2012 the façade
will be that the government is paying out $1,159 billion [$1 trillion X
(1 + column 2)], as reflected in retiree and employee paychecks,
government budgets and newspaper reports. However, in purchasing power
terms, by 2012 a dollar will only buy what 62 cents did in 2007 (column
3). So the real dollar cost of what the government is paying out is in
fact down to only $720 billion ($1,159 X 62.1%). In five years, despite
the appearance of paying out $159 billion in increased benefits, the
government can use its combined powers over both inflation and inflation
indexes to reduce real benefits by 28% (column 5), or $280 billion. (If
we compare what the public will see ($1,159 billion) compared to what is
really being paid ($720 billion) then the difference is an even more
dramatic $439 billion.)
The
above could be considered mildly complex, and my apologies if the
specifics were a little difficult to track. The mild complexity is a
necessity, however. For in this mild complexity lies both the heart of
the opportunity for the government – and your main defense as an
individual. Because this powerful one-two combination of controlling
inflation and controlling inflation-indexing is about mathematics and
economics – it isn’t easily reducible to a sound bite. The higher
the percentage of the population that doesn’t fully understand
what is going on – the better the strategy works from a political
perspective. Conversely, if you are to defend your lifestyle and savings
(and you do have strong defenses available, as we will discuss below),
then knowledge is your first and irreplaceable line of defense.
The
vital nature of understanding this complexity becomes even more clear
when we look ahead to the crucial years of 2017 and 2027. The year 2017
is the year when the government projects that Social Security payments
will exceed Social Security taxes. A very big problem – that may not
be such a problem after all, if the government is effectively paying out
only half in real terms of what has been promised to Social Security
beneficiaries. As shown in column 5, the combination of 10% inflation
and 3% inflation indexes would indeed produce a 48% savings for the
government by 2017.
The
year 2017 is a problem, but it is by 2027 when things truly become
impossible from a governmental perspective – if a dollar is worth a
dollar. For the years 2027-2029 are the crest of the Baby Boom’s
retirement, representing the time when the greatest numbers of Boomers
have retired, but before expected mortality has brought the total number
of retirees down. This is the time when we reach the central problem of
only two adults of working age for each person of retirement age. An
unaffordable impossibility for our current Social Security and Medicare
structure – unless we have both inflation and inflation index
manipulation. In that case, as shown in column 5, the real cost of
meeting promises will have been reduced by 73% -- making
the impossible into the possible.
The Cost Of Meeting
Impossible Promises
There
is a cost to the government’s need to turn the impossible into the
possible: a steady impoverishment of the people who are owed the
inflation-indexed payments. This impoverishment is illustrated in the
graph below:
What
the chart illustrates is the composition of inflation-indexed payments
to workers and retirees. The light blue represents purchasing power, and
the red represents loss of purchasing power. If the inflation index were
to keep up with inflation – as promised – then there would be no
red, the entire chart would be light blue. However, when indexes don’t
keep up with actual inflation, the government’s gain is directly paid
for out of retiree and worker pockets. This theft by index management
starts at 6% (the red equals column 5 from the chart), and steadily
builds. A little more than a quarter of the purchasing power of benefits
and salaries has been taken in 5 years, about half in ten years, and
three quarters is gone in 20 years. For the inflation-indexed retiree or
worker, the red zone is the steady loss of purchasing power, and
therefore loss of lifestyle, as real income steadily declines even while
giving the semblance of increasing in exact step with inflation.
It
is a steady breaking of promises, in year by year increments, that
systematically impoverishes the elderly, as well as all workers whose
salary increases are tied to the inflation index (which includes almost
all government employees). In their hearts, many Boomers already know
that they won’t be collecting anywhere close to the benefits that
their parents received, as do the generations behind them. What the
graph above illustrates is the precise and steady, year by year method,
in which most of the purchasing power of retiree promises (including
inflation-indexed pensions as well as Social Security) can be destroyed
before most of the promises are paid.
Will This Really
Happen?
Will
what is shown above really work for 20 years? Probably not entirely by
itself, or without the population at large becoming at least partially
aware of what is going on. However, the options are limited for closing
impossible gaps. Taxes can only be raised so high, and then it comes
down to benefit cuts. The more above board and open the cuts in benefits
and salary – the greater the political damage. The harder the changes
will be to enact, and the more politicians voted out of office. On the
other hand, inflation and inflation indexing are subtle and difficult to
understand, relative to openly raising taxes or openly slashing
benefits. Complex and subtle helps politicians stay in office, and
assuming politicians want to stay in office – do you think they will
refrain from trying the subtler approach again and again? Repeatedly
making the choice to stay in office until the end results are anything
but subtle?
Notice
that this indexing “management” strategy has some quite beneficial
side effects as well. Incomes are always rising, so there is no excuse
for the population not to go out and spend -- even if they have been
feeling a bit mysteriously strapped for funds lately, and need to put it
on the plastic. The stock indexes are always setting new records, even
in the unlikely case that the newspapers start adjusting for inflation.
Of course, most importantly of all, the unending supply of good news
helps keep politicians in office. What do you think the politicians will
choose? Is your portfolio and retirement protected against that choice?
If you are relying on an inflation-indexed salary or pension – do you
have an investment plan for covering the red zone in the graph, during a
time when high inflation is shredding the value of conventional
financial assets?
How Many People Can
You Fool & For How Long?
Can
you really fool all the people with a combination of inflation and
inflation index manipulation? Some might say “No way! People are way
too smart for that, and the professors and media would quickly expose
the fraud.” Interesting thing though… 40 years ago, one working
adult earned enough to support a middle class household of five or six,
including a stay-at-home spouse and three or four kids. Today, normal
seems to be defined more like 2 working adults for every middle class
household with 1-2 children. True, the houses are bigger, the color TVs
are bigger, there are two cars, they are better cars, people eat out
more and travel more, etc, etc. But, as we’ve gone from one worker to
support 5-6 people, to one worker to support 1.5 to 2 people… did you
ever wonder how accurate that indexing has been in practice?
It
isn’t reported as such, but arguably the inflation index is one of the
most important political statistics. It determines everything from the
economic growth that is reported, to the benefits that are paid out, to
budget deficits and surpluses, and whether taxes need to be raised.
Indeed, the difference between prosperity and recession – as reported
in the papers – can be no more than 2-3% in the inflation index, as
economic growth is net of inflation indexes. Such complex calculations
as well, not understood by either reporters or the public, performed in
obscurity – but watched with keen attention by the political
appointees, who know exactly what it will take to win the next
election.
There
is not even a need for a “conspiracy”, or a group of politicians
meeting in secret and deciding to defraud the public. Human nature, time
and overwhelming incentives are enough to gradually make real what we
have illustrated in this article. Political appointees know how to
reward those government employees who can find a way to rationalize
dropping the rate of growth of the index by 0.2% here, and 0.02% there.
If as an employee you want to get promoted – that is what you do.
Which creates an environment of decades of incentives leading to decades
of incremental changes, steadily moving the standard as the changes add
up. Human nature being what it is, what do you think happens? Has
already happened? Will happen when the political motivations reach all
new levels?
Investor Implications
The
problem for retirees, inflation-indexed workers and general investors is
that the above strategy works like a charm from a governmental
perspective. Indeed it works better than any other alternative from a
political perspective, as it allows much of the damage to be hidden
behind statistics and economists, even as promises are legally kept,
while being broken in substance. The façade of making
inflation-adjusted payments in full just won’t work, the government
would have to go bankrupt – and the government has no intention of
going bankrupt. It is therefore incumbent upon thoughtful investors
invest in such a way that they protect themselves from the actions the
government will take in avoiding bankruptcy. This means preparing not
only for a likely environment of high and sustained inflation that
destroys the value of financial assets – but for a real inflation rate
that may be substantively higher than what you will be reading about in
the paper.
It
also means that if you have substantial future income that is
inflation-indexed – you are likely not fully protected from inflation.
That there is a good chance you will get your inflation-indexed future
payments in full as promised, but those rising payments will steadily
buy less with each passing year. Which means that if you want to
maintain your planned standard of living – you will need to find a way
to offset the steady spread of the red in the preceding graph. What you
need most is a targeted financial strategy that focuses on profiting
from inflation.
Whether
you are a general investor or inflation-indexed beneficiary, the first
and most obvious step is to choose to invest in the reality of tangible
assets rather than symbols. These tangible assets could be gold, silver,
real estate, energy or farmland, to name some of the most prominent
examples.
In
combination with the tangible asset step, there is a second step to take
as well, whether you are a Boomer, or older or younger – and that is
to gain the knowledge you need to protect yourself, and even turn
adversity into opportunity. This will mean looking inflation straight in
the eye and saying: “Inflation, you are likely to play a big role in
my personal future, and instead of ignoring you or thoughtlessly
flailing away at you – I will study you and your ways. I will learn
the deeply unfair ways in which you redistribute wealth, and the
counterintuitive lessons about how some investors will be destroyed by
inflation and repeatedly pay taxes for the privilege, even while other
investors are claiming real wealth on a tax-free basis. I will learn to
position myself so that you redistribute wealth to me, and the worse the
financial devastation you wreak – the more my personal real net worth
grows. I will examine the official blindness to inflation within
government tax policy that creates the Inflation Tax, and instead of
raging or despairing, I will understand that a blind opponent is a weak
opponent, and I will take advantage your blindness and use tax policy to
multiply my real wealth.”
It
truly does boil down to common sense. The impossible is approaching
fast, and we each have the choice of positioning ourselves so that our
financial well-being depends on impossible promises being kept – or
positioning ourselves so that we will profit from those impossible
promises being broken. As you decide, do keep in mind that some of the
most lucrative long-term and tax-advantaged opportunities to profit from
inflation that have been available for decades can be found right now,
but, by the time resurgent inflation dominates the headlines – the
easy arbitrage opportunities will be long gone.
This
essay and the websites, including the readings, pamphlets, books and
audio recordings, contain the ideas and opinions of the author. They are
conceptual explorations of general economic principles, and how people
may – or may not – interact in the future. As with any discussion of
the future, there cannot be any absolute certainty. What this website
does not contain is specific investment, legal or any other form of
professional advice. If specific advice is needed, it should be sought
from an appropriate professional. Any liability, responsibility or
warranty for the results of the application of principles contained in
the website, readings, pamphlets, recordings, books and other products,
either directly or indirectly, are expressly disclaimed by the author.

© 2007 Daniel
R. Amerman, CFA
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Daniel R. Amerman, CFA
the-great-retirement-experiment.com
Duluth, MN USA
Email
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Daniel
R. Amerman is a futurist and financial consultant with a unique approach
to helping individuals and organizations prepare for and profit from an
upcoming time of generational change and likely financial turmoil. He is
a Chartered Financial Analyst and former investment banker, with MBA and
BSBA degrees in finance and over 20 years of financial experience.
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
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