In this economy? How money & markets really work

Kyla Scanlon

Book - 2024

"An illustrated guide to the mad math and terrible terminology of economics, from one of the internet's favorite financial educators. The stuff you really need to know about how the economy works? It's pretty simple. Yes, even if you were bored to tears in economics class, or if you're cross-eyed from reading painfully convoluted--or straight-up misguided--financial commentary. In this particularly disorienting era, many have turned to a young economic analyst named Kyla Scanlon for answers. Now, Scanlon is writing a definitive, approachable guide to the key concepts and mechanics of economics and the most common myths and fallacies to steer clear of. Through her trademark blend of creative analogies, clever illustration...s, refreshingly lucid language--and even quotes from poetry, literature, and philosophy--she answers questions such as: What is Fed cred, Fed flexing, and Fedspeak? Is our national debt really a threat? What is a "mild" recession, exactly? What's really happening in the labor market, and how do we improve it for workers? At a time when experts overcomplicate simple things loudly, choosing to generate smoke rather than clearing the air, In This Economy? shows that understanding the markets--and the systems they operate in--is easier than you think. Whether you're worried about your mortgage rate, job security, bank account balance, or the health of the broader economy, this concise and witty guide will give you the confidence to make smarter financial decisions--no matter what the headlines say"--

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 330/Scanlon (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 5, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York : Crown Currency, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Kyla Scanlon (author)
Physical Description
xxi, 278 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593727874
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Vibe Economy
  • Chapter 1. The Economic Kingdom
  • The Kingdom
  • Vibes Are the Economy
  • Chapter 2. The Vibe Economy
  • Moods and Markets
  • The Economic Circle of Life
  • Fueling Feelings
  • Vibe-ology and Emotion Economy
  • The Uncertainty Cake
  • Economic Mood Rings
  • Part II. How Money Works
  • Chapter 3. The Weird World of Money
  • The Weird World of Money
  • Dollars and Sense: What Makes Money, Money?
  • Through the Ages: The Evolution of Money
  • The American Currency Story: Revolution to Recognition
  • Chapter 4. The Mechanics of Modern Money
  • The Banking Blueprint
  • Fractional Reserve Banking
  • The Art of Lending
  • Decoding Bank Balance Sheets
  • The Invisible Sheriff
  • How Banks Hedge Risk
  • How Banks Can Fail
  • The Dollar's Reign
  • Rethinking the Dollar
  • Final Thoughts
  • Part III. How Money is Measured
  • Chapter 5. Supply and Demand
  • Introduction to Supply and Demand
  • The Economics of Banana Bread
  • Supply Chains
  • Semiconductors
  • Used Cars
  • Eggflation: When Eggs Come in Short Supply
  • Beyond Mechanics and into Policy
  • Making Supply Chains Better
  • Chapter 6. GDP and the Economy
  • Measuring GDP
  • Consumption
  • Investment
  • Government Purchases
  • Net Exports
  • The Gingerbread Yeti Economy
  • Debt-Fueled Growth
  • What Does GDP Really Mean?
  • Growth at Any Cost
  • Looking to the Future
  • Chapter 7. Commodities
  • Globalization and Commodities
  • External Factors and Commodities
  • Oil
  • Gas Prices
  • Metals
  • The Rise of U.S. Shale Oil Production
  • The Rise of Renewables
  • Artificial Intelligence and Commodities
  • Chapter 8. Inflation
  • Types of Flation
  • Measuring Inflation
  • The Consumer Price Index: The People's Inflation
  • Personal Consumption Expenditures: The People's Inflation, But for the Fed
  • The Producer Price Index: Inflation for Businesses
  • The Inflation Pizza
  • Inflation Expectations
  • Causes of Inflation
  • #1 Price Hikes
  • A Quick Profit Explainer
  • #2 The State of the Labor Market
  • #3 Globalization
  • #4 Energy Markets
  • Other Types of Flations
  • Deflation
  • Hyperinflation
  • Chapter 9. The Labor Market
  • What Is the Labor Market?
  • Key Labor Market Metrics
  • The Unemployment Rate
  • The Labor Force Participation Rate
  • Surveys and Measurements
  • Wages
  • The Minimum Wage
  • The Skewed Way We See Wage Growth
  • The International Impact of Low Wages
  • How We Value Work
  • Worker Power
  • How Can the Labor Market Be Improved?
  • Immigration
  • Parental Leave and Disability Policies
  • Rethinking Ownership
  • Building
  • Chapter 10. The Housing Market
  • The American Dream
  • The Housing Cycle Is the Business Cycle
  • How to Buy a House
  • Mortgage Rates Over the Past Two Years
  • Well, Why Don't We Have Enough Homes?
  • Housing in Other Countries
  • Fixing the Problem
  • Chapter 11. Stock Market
  • What Are Markets?
  • Risk Types in Markets
  • Stock Market versus Economy
  • Valuation Example
  • Exchange-Traded Funds
  • Is BlackRock Running the World?
  • Index Providers
  • Passive versus Active
  • The Stock Market Is Seven Companies
  • Efficient (and Inefficient) Markets
  • What Happened in 2021?
  • Why Did Markets Become a Meme?
  • Chapter 12. Bond Market
  • The Bond Market
  • What Are Bonds?
  • Bonds Between Friends
  • Bond Ratings
  • High-Yield Friend
  • Treasury Bills, Notes, and Bonds
  • Treasury Market
  • Markets as Vibe Reflectors
  • Chapter 13. Cryptocurrency
  • The Cryptocurrency Narrative
  • Nonfungible Tokens
  • Is Dogecoin Alive or Dead?
  • FTX
  • Where Crypto Went Wrong
  • Chapter 14. Recessions
  • Recessions and Economic Downturns
  • The Semantics of a Recession
  • What Does a Recession Look Like?
  • Historic Recessions
  • 2008 Recession
  • 2020 Recession
  • Zombie Companies
  • The Vibecession
  • The Benefits of Recessions
  • Part IV. How Money Moves
  • Chapter 15. Fiscal Policy
  • What Is Fiscal Policy?
  • What Does the Government Spend Money On?
  • Taxes
  • Bonds
  • The Debt Ceiling
  • The United Kingdom Shows That Fiscal Policy Is an Art
  • Lessons from the Eurozone
  • Can the Government Survive?
  • Fiscal Policy Is Good, Actually
  • Chapter 16. Monetary Policy
  • What Does the Fed Do?
  • How Do the Fed's Tools Work?
  • Reserve Requirements
  • Open-Market Operations
  • Repo Agreements
  • Types of Repo Agreements
  • The Discount Rate
  • The Fed Funds Rate
  • Being a Central Bank Is About Belief
  • Monetary Policy in 2020
  • Fed Cred
  • Chapter 17. The Federal Reserve
  • Who Started the Fed?
  • How Does the Federal Reserve Work?
  • Board of Governors
  • Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
  • Federal Reserve Banks
  • The Chair oh the Board
  • The Fed's Narrative
  • Narrative Creation
  • Resistance to the Narrative
  • The Fed's Mountain
  • The 1970s
  • Volcker in 2022
  • 2 Percent Target
  • How the Fed Deals with Markets
  • The Fed and the Labor Market
  • Navigating the Fog
  • Part V. Theories, Problems, and Opportunities
  • Chapter 18. Old Guy and New Theories
  • Classical Economics
  • Keynesian Economics
  • Monetarism
  • New Growth Theory
  • Other Theories
  • Chapter 19. Problems
  • How to Give Up
  • The State of the American Dream
  • Economy and Mental Health
  • The Shifting Nature of Work
  • Demographics
  • When Systems Fail
  • Your Eyeballs Are Dollar Signs
  • Social Media Makes It Worse
  • Media Literacy Crisis
  • Media, Nostalgia, and Consumerism
  • Things Are AH the Same Now
  • What GME Really Meant
  • Economic Inequality and Cooperation
  • Chapter 20. Opportunities
  • Healthcare
  • Immigration
  • Housing
  • Education
  • Clean Energy
  • The Abundance Mindset
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The robust debut from former options trader Scanlon provides a refreshingly accessible overview of how the U.S. economy works. Exploring the government's tools for influencing financial markets, Scanlon explains that the Federal Reserve serves as "an economic vibe setter" that cools or heats up the economy through raising or lowering the "interest rates that depository institutions (including banks) charge each other" for the overnight loans that ensure banks have enough money on hand to meet customers' demands. Scanlon focuses on helping readers understand pressing economic concerns, as when she notes that the National Bureau of Economic Research consults a variety of data to make an ultimately "pretty subjective" decision about when to declare a recession, and argues that inflation is usually caused by price hikes, tight labor markets, increased globalization, and disruptions in energy markets. Throughout, Scanlon emphasizes the role that "vibes and feelings" play in shaping financial markets, suggesting that such economic indicators as consumer spending depend on actions that stem from countless individuals' assessments about the state of the economy. Scanlon's conversational tone provides a welcome alternative to standard stodgy economic explainers, though the overabundance of exclamation marks sometimes irks ("Borrowing money is okay! It really is!"). Still, this is an ideal primer for readers whose eyes glaze over at the mere mention of the debt ceiling. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young progressive's take on how the economy works and what it means to ordinary consumers. If Madeline Pendleton's I Survived Capitalism and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt speaks to the intricacies of personal finance, Scanlon's offering ratchets up the discussion into more ethereal realms--the economy as a reflection of not just on-the-ground realities but also human emotions. The author opens her debut book with "The Deciders," the higher-ups who build and shape economic policies that, at least in theory, "are designed to work for the collective benefit." The Federal Reserve is among this group, with its two sometimes-conflicting missions of keeping employment high while keeping inflation low through such instruments as contractionary monetary policy. Scanlon does a good job in later sections of relating such macro issues to the vicissitudes of daily life: why, for instance, the imposition of tariffs or the relative strength of the dollar to the yuan makes Chinese trade goods more or less expensive, with the resulting knock-on effects on consumers' pocketbooks. The discussion of recession is admirably clear, and Scanlon ably explains the causal mechanisms and the fact that from time to time, the economy needs a reset, albeit at a cost borne by ordinary people more than those with deeper resources. Throughout, the author, leaning to the left, reminds readers that the economy is ultimately about people, a matter that governments and corporations seem to have forgotten. "If the minimum wage had moved with productivity growth (as it did up until 1968)," she notes, "it would now be about $24.00 per hour"--a fact that, one hopes, will startle policymakers into taking the issue seriously. Currently, writes Scanlon, "there is no place in the United States where a minimum-wage worker can afford a two-bedroom apartment." An accessible overview of the dismal science. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 The Economic Kingdom The person that turns over the most rocks wins the game. And that's always been my philosophy. --Peter Lynch When I was younger, I loved to play a game called "The Princess and the Kingdom." My brother and I would build fantastical lands with our toys, complete with castles, moats, and tiny LEGO armies that really hurt if you accidentally stepped on them with your bare feet. For me, empire building was the best part. How fruitful the land was, how protected the entrances were, what tools the people had access to--that's what really determined how the game would play out. The same holds for the financial infrastructure that's woven through our lives, our very own Economic Kingdom. Let's start with the biggest castle: the monetary policy castle. The Kingdom The monetary policy castle is presided over by the Federal Reserve, which is supposed to be managing the entire kingdom. We'll get into the inner workings of the Fed soon, but for right now what you need to know is that the monetary policy castle is most directly in charge of two other castles: inflation (defined as a rise in prices that creates a decrease in purchasing power, something we are all familiar with) and the labor market (where we find critically important metrics such as the labor force participation rate, the quits rate, the unemployment rate, and more). As I dive deeper, I'll describe how the Federal Reserve's actions can have far-reaching effects on the economic well-being of the kingdom's citizens, influencing their ability to afford goods and services and to find meaningful employment. Each castle (such as the housing market, stock market, and bond market) has a moat around it that provides a little insulation. That's why the Fed may fire a cannon (say, raising interest rates), and the cannonball might land without much of a hit--meaning that it really didn't do much. In other cases, it might damage the drawbridge and make day-to-day functioning harder, or it might take out a squadron of an attacking army (such as unwanted inflation). The Federal Reserve is constantly firing cannons near all of those castles in an attempt to exert control over the empire. Near is an important part of that sentence because the Fed cannon can occasionally make direct hits--but the castles are pretty strong, and it's hard to take them down easily. Sometimes, the Fed simply doesn't have enough (or the right kind of) ammo to directly hit them. Unlike my Princess and the Kingdom game, where castles could be knocked down chessboard style, there are too many variables influencing the Economic Kingdom for "I hit this and there are direct consequences" to work. More on all this later, but contractionary monetary policy is the Fed's way of putting the brakes on the economy. Hiking interest rates--their major tool for fighting inflation--makes borrowing money more expensive, which cools down demand for goods and services. On the flip side, expansionary monetary policy is the Fed's way of speeding the economy up by cutting rates--no cannon fire, but more an injection of money into neighboring kingdoms. The U.S. dollar castle is a "secret weapon" of the monetary policy castle because of the impact that the dollar has on the neighboring lands of developed and emerging markets. When the Fed uses its tool kit to strengthen the dollar--meaning that you can exchange it for more money in foreign countries--there are geopolitical consequences! For example, a strong U.S. dollar makes Chinese imports more expensive for American consumers and businesses--so Americans buy less stuff from China. As a result, Chinese goods become less competitive in the U.S. market, potentially leading to a decline in Chinese export revenues. Far-reaching impacts from the almighty dollar! Later on, I'll walk through the intricate relationships between global currencies and the ways in which fluctuations in the dollar can influence trade, inflation rates, and especially geopolitical dynamics. The commodity castle is another core part of the Economic Kingdom. Commodities are basic goods that are used by everyone: agricultural products such as cotton and wheat, energy products such as oil and gas, metals such as gold and silver, and more. They are the common denominator between everything that we interact with on a daily basis--the phones we carry, the clothes we wear, the food we eat, the cars we drive. If the commodity castle did not exist, neither would the Economic Kingdom. While it's easy to downplay their significance in our daily lives, commodities play a vital role in shaping inflation, supply chains, and the overall economic health of the kingdom. The Economic Kingdom reflects one of the harshest forms of reality, because what's going on there really, really matters and is also really difficult to predict or control. A significant decline in the real value of the dollar could result in soaring prices of everyday necessities, causing financial hardships for families. The unpredictable and drastic fluctuations in the housing market could lead to a housing crisis, leaving many people without a stable place to call home. The turbulent movements of stocks in the market could wipe out people's life savings, affecting their retirement plans and future well-being. Policymakers typically measure the prosperity of the Economic Kingdom through the gross domestic product, or GDP, the total value of all goods and services produced in an economy. Nations around the world fixate on getting that number to climb. GDP is one of several key metrics that influence the directions in which the monetary policy castle fires its influential cannon (and isn't a great measure because it doesn't really capture anything beyond spending). Later on, I'll explore other metrics that provide a more comprehensive understanding of the kingdom's health and well-being. As unscientific as it may sound, our vibes--our collective feelings about the economy--hold a surprising amount of power over outcomes. Vibes Are the Economy You might scoff and say "Vibes? I haven't had an emotion in years," but consumer sentiment--more holistically, our vibes--not only affects how much we borrow, spend, save, and earn but also moves the needle on food prices, gas prices, shelter costs, wages, and more. Frenzied stock market rallies can stoke irrational optimism, and grim headlines can stoke worry and uncertainty. It's not data alone informing our gut feelings about the state of the economy. If people have an experience (say, living through the 2008 recession) and evidence (home prices skyrocketing), that might shape their interpretation ("Another unprecedented event to live through!"), which shapes their expectations ("Things are starting to suck, and I think they're going to start sucking a lot more"), which shapes their behavior ("I'd better ask for a raise at my next performance review"), which shapes company behavior ("We need to raise prices to keep pace with these increased labor costs"), which shapes Fed policy ("We need to slow down inflation, so we're going to hike interest rates by seventy-five basis points"). Then of course, there are downstream consequences to the Fed hiking and implementing contractionary monetary policy--things slow down, people don't spend as much, businesses don't make as much money, some people lose their jobs. That's how rate hikes can put people out of work. But rate cuts (expansionary monetary policy) do the opposite--more money flowing around, more hiring activity. Usually. Of course, this is the economy--and no one really knows what will happen. The Fed did one of their largest rate-hike cycles in years during the early 2020s, and the labor market improved! The big-picture takeaway is that a lot of the policy that influences the Economic Kingdom is based on theory, on the past, on what-has-already-happened-so-it-will-happen-again-ism--including some people advocating that we return to the gold standard even if it isn't suitable in the current economic conditions. The U.S. government tends to have outdated regulations, inflexible and rigid implementation, limited policymaker engagement with the policies they set, one-size-fits-all solutions, ignorance of technological advancement, and few to no feedback mechanisms. Everything takes a long time to fix, and sometimes it's too late to fix it. Edgehill, a neighborhood in Nashville, is a key example of the housing crisis, which is caused by misaligned local zoning regulations, little change in zoning regulations, and little interest in fixing the situation. Edgehill went from 86 percent Black population in 2000 to 14 percent by 2020, according to the U.S. Census. A lot of it was due to rising home prices and the loss of old, naturally affordable housing units, as well as low-density zoning (which doesn't allow more affordable multifamily homes to be built). As Ursula K. Le Guin wrote in Tales from Earthsea: Dragonfly, "What goes too long unchanged destroys itself. The forest is forever because it dies and dies and so lives." Excerpted from In This Economy?: How Money and Markets Really Work by Kyla Scanlon All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.