Having just spent ten days on the beach in Ibiza, I am able to provide strong circumstantial evidence that European tourism is back, at least for a while. Granted, the clubs—which I am now too old to go to anyway—are still closed, but hotels, restaurants and beaches were full as ever. Given that 80-to-90% of activity on the island takes place outside, in a sunny and relatively windy coastal environment, the virus wasn't much of a threat, even though numbers had been climbing prior to our arrival. Indoor mask mandates, which are now commonplace, really was the only sign of the virus as far as we were concerned, notwithstanding having to navigate the byzantine testing and tracking rules for travel. The Dutch nurse who performed our pre-travel Covid-test informed me and my wife that tour operators on the island had hoped that August this year would see activity levels return to 50% of its 2019 level, before claiming that the true number is closer to 80%, and that operators are expecting to extend the season into October. If that's true, it adds to the evidence that economic activity in Europe will improve further in the next few months. That’s good news.
Read MoreThe finance and economics commentariat has been busy in the past few months educating each other about what inflation is, and what isn’t. To re-cap, just because prices are going up doesn’t mean that inflation is. Inflation, after all, is the rate at which prices are advancing, not the fact that prices are rising in themselves. More specifically, just because prices go up a lot in period 1, inflation can’t really be said to be accelerating unless the rate at which prices go up is higher in period 2, 3 and so on. To complete the circle; if prices were falling, we’d call it deflation, and the same argument on the rate of decline would apply, with an inverse sign. The amount of time spent by economists pointing out this trivial point is mostly an attempt to assure each other, and policymakers, that the spectacular CPI and PPI headlines we presently see on the screens are nothing to worry about. It follows that slowing the pace of asset purchases, not to mention raising interest rates, would be a grave and unforgivable error.
Read MoreMarkets have been propelled by a fairly simple story in the past nine months, split across two themes. First, market prices have been driven by the expectation that vaccination will once-and-for all allow us to put the virus in our rearview mirror, and secondly, that fiscal and monetary policy will remain primed for support. This story was always going to be challenged at some point in 2021 as vaccination programs reach their climax and policymakers inevitably begin to consider what degree of stimulus that is needed in a world not in the grips of a pandemic. And wouldn’t you know it; here we are. As far as the success of the vaccines is concerned, it is crucial to remember that the final path to a full reopening is as much a question of politics as it is about epidemiology. Indeed, at this point, I am inclined to believe that it is mostly about politics. This isn’t surprising. Cases were never going to zero—at least not as long as we keep testing at the rate we’re doing at the moment—and new variants were always going to elude the vaccines, one way or the other.
Read MoreThe evolution of mortality through the demographic transition is as close as we come to a deterministic process in the analysis of population dynamics. Science and technology have become increasingly better at keeping people alive, a benefit that still seems to drive the human experience to this day. It’s possible to identify milestones through history such as the development of modern sanitation to defeat contagious air- and waterborne illnesses, the development of vaccines for specific illnesses, as well as overall technological development in the field of healthcare. It is a story about pinning down the causality between rising national income and technological development and the improvement in the human living condition in the past 250 years. Researchers still debate the relative importance and merits of specific drivers, but it’s possible to generalize, all the same. The story about of human mortality is contained in a few relationships, for the individual, between, and possibly within countries. It is a story about Nike swoosh-shaped, logarithmic and asymptotic curves, and the extent to which we observe deviations from such stylized relationships over time, and why.
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