Stuff You Should Know - Selects: What's the misery index?
Episode Date: July 23, 2022Economists love their data because somewhere in the numbers lies the answer to the ills of the country. They also love to frame data in a way people can relate to. Such is the case with the famous "mi...sery index." Learn all about it in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, everybody. It's Chuck here
I guess it's time to introduce another Saturday select
I'm pretty miserable. So maybe I should just do this one on the misery index. It's called
What's the misery index and?
It's from June 23rd 2016. I hope you like it. It was a lot of fun recording it
Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
The W stands for Wayne mm-hmm their Wayne coin
That gets you every time I know it's funny to be 45 years old been named after Wayne going because he's like 48, right?
No, he's in his fifties
But it would be weird. I would have been named after a very
like kindergarten age Wayne coin
All right, you know, maybe your parents were friends with his parents and they really thought a lot about him
Boy, he's a real achiever. That Wayne coins going places
Okay
That was a weird sidetrack. It was already out of the gate man. Mm-hmm. How you feeling?
I'm good. Got a lot on your plate got a lot going on
Meh. Oh, you know what today is?
What?
Dude today is the day
That I leave this office and I go to a shop in Inman Park and pick up four brand new last chance garage hats
Oh, wow. It's a big day
Very big day big day. So I have a couple of people I'd like to thank
Uh-huh. It's a bigger deal than it should be for a grown man in a hat, but we all understand
first of all Katie my
Custom patch maker. This is really where it all came together. The patch isn't right. The hat's not right, right Katie killed it
it looks identical and
You can find her work at tulip cake
dot-com TULIP cake and I said, you know people might ask you to make you to make them
Last chance garage patches. Did you ever destroy the mold and I said, I don't you know, it's on you. It's up to you legally
I'm just saying you might get requests
You should have been like Ivan the terrible who blinded his architects after they built his palace
Now I don't care people. I'd love to see these things around and
LaMood big hats
LAM OOD for big heads because part of the problem was finding
Big and tall hat. Yeah, man like uh the problem I have with hats these days
I don't look like I have a huge head
No, they they just fit so snugly and they don't go far down enough on my head
So I finally looked up oversized hats and found LaMood hats and dude, they're exactly like the old hat
Except it doesn't stink
Oh, yeah, like these are great. I got four brand-news. It's an improvement for sure
So are you going to put one in like the Seed Vault in Norway?
Uh, probably one there. Uh, there'll be one in the nuclear suitcase
and um
Uh, I'll wear the other two at the same time at the same front and back like Sherlock Holmes. That's right. Anyway, I'm super excited
So it's pretty cool. Thank you to Katie and LaMood hats for
Allowing me to spend too much money getting four hats remade and speaking of while we're thanking people
We we owe a long overdue. Thank you to a guy who um made us a really cool sign
Um, oh, you mean the the sign this guy made for us like seven years ago. Yeah, his name's matt street
He's at fatbison.com and he made a really cool woodcarve sign. Yeah, it was in our tv show
It was like like the production company got clearance rights for it and all this stuff and we love the sign
But we just forgot to ever thank matt so matt. Thank you so much for the sign. We love it
We have it hanging here in the studio. It is a work of art and we appreciate and we're sorry for the oversight. Yeah
Um, is that all the thank yous? I think so. Let's talk about the misery index, huh? Yeah, what a great transition
Have you um, had you heard of it before you came across this article?
Yeah, I didn't know a lot about it though and um, apparently it's gone a little bit out of fashion lately from what I understand
Yeah, I think so because well, well, let's get into it
Okay, it turns out economics as a whole is in danger of going out of fashion
I read this I've read this really interesting article on aeon, which is maybe the greatest website on the planet
80on.com
It might be dot co because you say that british about a lot of websites
I think I said about aeon a lot. Okay, and and it just seems like I'm talking about different ones
But there's this article by allen j
Levinovitz and it's called the new astrology and he basically makes a parallel between
Economics and economists and economic theory when you take economics and try to apply it to future forecasting
right and the um
the bce
chinese astrologers that basically directed the way that the
Economy or the government was going to move based on the movements of the stars
So what are they saying? It's you might as well just do that
He draw some pretty pretty interesting parallels between the two that that economics in and of itself is not necessarily flawed
But when it's used to forecast the future, then it becomes inherently flawed. Yeah, this this article really kind of
Submits that yeah a little bit. Yeah to an extent. I mean the misery index is a legitimate economic tool and
It's hit or miss in a lot of ways. Yeah, I think one thing that hit home to me with researching this is
it just seems impossible to
Say that there's one
Correct way of doing things
Right or that is absolute and you're like, you know, if you do things this way
Then there will be nothing but growth in jobs and the gdp sure and gnp
And uh, it just it just doesn't seem to work that way
Right. I think the problem is is that if you listen to economists, they like to act like they do have a handle on that kind of
Thing, but if you really look into economics, it's very politicized. There's liberal economics and there's conservative economics and the fact that
Each one saying it's right kind of makes you think that maybe no one is, you know
But the misery index actually is is it started out from a guy who
Was pretty good at walking the line between conservative and liberal economics. Um a guy, uh,
What was his name oaken? Yeah, arthur oaken, right and he uh
He worked on kennedy's staff his council of economic advisors, uh, john f kennedy that is
and he was um, I get the feeling one of the main influences and
Talking kennedy who initially did not necessarily agree but talking kennedy into
Kind of trying to enact both conservative and liberal
Economic policies simultaneously, right? They were the u.s. Was in a recession. Yeah when kennedy took office in 1961
Um, and they talked him into not only increasing
Government spending like welfare programs. They raised the um the uh minimum wage. Yeah
And um some other stuff like that, but they also cut taxes. Yeah
Which it's you do one or the other you cut taxes and hope everything goes for the best because businesses will start investing in spending
Or you start it you start investing in welfare programs to help your ailing
Um lower and middle classes, right? You don't do both. Yeah, and kennedy did both and it was successful
Yeah, he well, he you know at first he said
I don't know about this. I don't know about this author. My kennedy sounds like a robot
My kennedy too actually yours is fine. Uh, but arthur mr. Oaken oaken oaken. I think oaken oaken
It's a weird name. Okay u n
Uh, he talked him into it and said trust me
And
Things worked out
In that case. Yeah. Well and a lot of guys including oaken's names
Were made by this advice that panned out like the u.s entered a boom. Yeah, and um
Oaken ended up as being the head of the council of economic advisors for kennedy's successor linden johnson, right? Yeah, and um
One thing that economic economists economists love to do
is um
I mean, they love to forecast and all that stuff, but it's all about data
Sure, man. They love to pour over data. Yeah, like stuff that makes the average person
Their mind bleed from boredom. They just find it fascinating. That's what they do on friday nights friday nights
They pour over data historical data trying to find, you know, it's like the big puzzle and they're all trying to solve it
right, so they pour over this data oaken did and um
He said, you know what? I noticed something here
Between 1948 when we started recording, uh, some some decent unemployment, uh,
Rates, right?
Which I didn't know I didn't know we started that in 1948. Yeah, it seems like it would have gone back before then
Uh, but between 1948 1960 he said, you know what? I've noticed that the gross national product rises three percent
For every percentage point
That unemployment falls. Mm-hmm with the caveat that unemployment has to be between three and seven point five percent, right?
Which is a pretty like
It's a pretty bold statement to say I've noticed this is a definite trend
It is and it came to be called oaken's law because
It was verified other people poured over the data and like this guy's right
Man, he just keeps coming up with hits doesn't he? That's right. Um, and the the reason you would want to know some
our cane piece of
Data like that is that if you know that that's the case
Then you can say well if we attack unemployment can get it down a couple of points
We can you know raise gdp or gmp, you know by three percent every time we drop it
So when we need to bulk gmp up, yeah, we just attack unemployment, right? Right easy peasy
Uh, yeah, and everyone said thank you art
Yeah, things worked out pretty well for a while, but then the 1970s came along
and um
If you what we're gonna talk a little bit about stagflation now, but if you haven't heard it
We have a pretty good episode. What's it good? I think so. Okay called. What is stagflation?
From february 24 2011
um
Yeah, I think as far as our economics episodes it it was not bad. Okay. I went back and listened to a lot of it
Oh, okay. Good before I got bored. So it checks out. Yeah, the first three minutes were great
um, but yeah go back and listen to that but um
Like you said he served as chairman of the cea for johnson and then in 1973 a very
Uh
Unfortunate thing happened that kind of ended up rocking the world and the united states in particular with our economy
Um, so we're gonna take a break and we're gonna talk when we get back about the middle east
Hey, i'm lance bass host of the new i hard podcast frosted tips with lance bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Uh, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because i'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god
Seriously, I swear and you won't have to send an sos because i'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so my husband michael um, hey, that's me
Yep, we know that michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
Step by step. Oh not another one. Uh-huh kids relationships life in general can get messy
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Oh, just stop now
If so tell everybody yeah, everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with lance bass on the i heart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm mange shtikler and to be honest. I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born
It's been a part of my life in india
It's like smoking you might not smoke but you're gonna get secondhand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you
It got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams cancelled marriages kpop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crash down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer. I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to skyline drive and the i heart radio app
apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
Here's to the great american settlers
The millions of you have settled for unsatisfying jobs because they pay the bills and uh
You just kind of fell into it and you know, it's like totally fine
Just another few decades or so and then you can enjoy yourself
Of course, there is something else you could do if you got something to say
You could oh, I don't know start a podcast with speaker from i heart
And unleash your creative freedom and spend all day researching and talking about stuff you love
And maybe even earn enough money to one day tell your irritating bosses
As you quit and walk off into the sunset
Hey, i'm no settler. I'm an explorer
Spreaker.com. That's a sbr
eak er
Salon over today
All right, what happened in 1973 the uh, i'm two years old
I am negative three. Okay the arab oil embargo happened, right? That's right
So at the time until very recently the u.s. Was super dependent on foreign oil. Yeah, like
Like other countries we wouldn't even sit down at the table with we were getting oil from right? Yeah, we're doing better now
Yeah with our dependency, but back then very bad very um, and it was a it was
a source of anxiety for a lot of people and that anxiety actually panned out so in um,
1973 egypt and syria and a few other arab nations
invaded the golan heights and the synai peninsula to attempt to take back land
From the state of israel, right? That's right. The u.s. Uh was found to be supplying arms to israel
So as far as the arab states were concerned the u.s. Had cast its lot on israel's side
And they were fairly peeved about that
So they literally shut off the tap
of oil
Flowing to the united states and other countries that were found. Yeah considered to be on the side of israel in this in this war
Huge deal. It was an enormous deal that the this foreign dependency
in the the
Precarious situation that it placed the united states and came to pass and the price of oil rose 37 percent
The long lines at the gas station were never seen before or since even after the financial crisis of 2008. Yeah
um, it was just insane. There was gas rationing in the united states in 1973 because of the um,
The oil embargo and after a while the teps were turned back on but that shock to the system
Screwed the economy up for a decade. Yeah inflation, uh went out of control and um, a very uh another
Unfortunate thing happened along the same timeline
unemployment
Started to creep up and these two things happening at the same time is devastating. Yeah, and up to this point
So first of all the u.s. Had never had a shock to the system like that. That was one thing. Yeah, it wasn't a gradual thing
It was just like abrupt. Yeah
But the other thing is when you have something that has never happened before you can look at it and say
Wow, what what happened and new things that have never happened before come out of that and one of the things
Was inflation and unemployment going up because up to this point
Economists just assume that the two were mutually exclusive right if you're if you're um, if inflation was up prices were high
That meant that companies could go out and hire more people. Yeah, so unemployment, of course would be low
Yeah, it kind of made sense. Well not after the oil embargo
The shock to the system led to like you said high unemployment rates and high inflation and uh, it was a miserable time
Yeah, and that uh, was called stagflation. Mm-hmm. It also led to skateboarding as we all know
Oh, yeah, because of the pools, right? Yeah, they could in cal. Well, actually that was the drought
But I think the drought was also tied into the economics
Sure, but they couldn't fill up swimming pools. So they started skating and swimming pools
Well, yeah, if you have a drought then you lose your crops and if you lose your crops
You lose money a significant sector of money. Exactly. So good news
We have half pipes now
Then quarter pipes and power perellta and power and perellta. They're still around, right? I think so, of course
Bad news is like you said it had a devastating effect for many many years on the united states
Right, so okan starts to look around. He said, you know what things are pretty bad here. One might even say miserable
I've gotten any acclaim for a while. Yeah, nothing's been named after me in a while
All right, so let me create this new
This new method for looking at the economy and it turns out to not be like a
Look over a period of time or anything, but just sort of like a polaroid of that
Day and not just that day for like the country as a whole or
For the fed or anything like that
But what he did that was different was he looked into
What the what it was like that day or that year for the average American? Yes in their daily life
Right, and he called it the misery index. Yeah, and it was very rudimentary
At the time it was just a simple calculation of the yearly rate of inflation plus the unemployment rate
Yeah, so if you have like five percent
Inflation and two percent unemployment. You have a seven percent misery index. It's as simple as that
I don't know why it got so much, you know, what was hailed as a big deal because I think oaken had a
A knack for noticing things that seemed obvious in retrospect, but at the time no one had ever noticed before
Okay, I'll buy it. Thank you. Why not?
All right, so now he has this index and not only can he look at a snapshot of that day
He can go back because he was a
Data wonk and he could look at data throughout history. Well at least in 1948
Yeah, which is when we started recording unemployment like we said, which must have been frustrating for him because our
Our inflation rates data goes back to 1914, but that's only part of the equation
Well, he must have been like, oh man, sure and to be able to look at the great depression you could have learned a lot, you know
Sure
So he went and he looked back and he says here is what we've noticed and this is so obvious to me
That that presidents and political parties are brought in and out of office largely
Depending on how the economy is doing. Yeah, but they kind of proved it
But not even just how the economy is doing like he was saying like the misery index you can use it to predict
Whether the the presidency is going to change hands politically. Yeah
So 1956
Misery index is 6.53, which is great
That's during Ike. Yeah, very low. Mr. Eisenhower
President Eisenhower and he got reelected because things were pretty good
Right as far as the misery index goes. Yeah. Yeah, everybody was pretty happy
Even though they didn't really know what the misery index was because it wasn't invented yet, right?
They just had a general sense. Well, yeah, they didn't call it that at the time
No, there's just like seems fine to me. You miserable. We like Ike. No, I'm not miserable. Are you?
So in 1968, uh, Johnson, uh, came to the end of his term
And the misery index was up to 8.13. And then he had his
Democratic successor Hubert Humphrey in line
And because the thing had crept up people a little more miserable and they said no get out of here
I want Mr. Nixon in office, right? And I guess
I'm not I'm not sure about this. So I don't understand why Johnson
was replaced by Humphrey by the democrats
And and this article and it seems to to be because of this misery index
That it would have predicted that but he was the incumbent president. Oh, is he only on one term or?
I let's see. So he was
He would have I should know this. No, he yeah, he was a one-term or technically one in a third or one in a quarter
Because he took over after Kennedy's assassination
But if his term was up in 68, then he would have won the 64 election
So he technically I think would have been able to have been president again. I'm not sure
We could have found this out, too
Sure, but I'll bet there's somebody out there who can explain it to us and it's so emailless. Will you?
Uh, at any rate Nixon gets elected and um,
The the misery index shot up to 11.67 during the first term but then started to just decline
enough that he did get re-elected
um, but then
Uh, in 1974 with Watergate the misery index leapt all the way up to 17.01. That's not good
No, that's that was the all-time high at the time from what I understand. I think so. Um, and that happened around
1974
Which meant that when Watergate broke some people who really subscribed to the misery index say
Watergate might not have been quite as big a deal if um, the misery index had been low at the time, right?
He might have been able to squeak by without resigning or being forced out of office
I think everyone has more leeway if things are great. Sure, you know, but he has his uh
His his currency had been spent man. I watched all the president's men a few weeks ago again. Yeah, you ever seen that? No
Great great movie. Yeah, I've always meant to you really really good
And just sort of like they don't make a lot of movies like that anymore spotlight
Reminded me of all the president's men. Sure. I haven't seen that one yet either. It's good. It's just I call it movies for adults
You know, there's no chase scenes or anything remarkable. It's just good dramatic
Movie making. Yeah, good stuff. Anyway, wait, what's wrong with chase scenes?
Huh, what's wrong with chase scenes? No, there's nothing inherently wrong with the chase scene
But I know what you mean just for the sake of a chase scene which we see a lot of these days
You know what I mean? Like Mark Ruffalo's chasing a priest in a car in spotlight. Yeah
Um
Where were we? Okay, we were with Nixon. Um, well not with Nixon. You know what I mean? Ford comes in office
For a short time and he actually managed to get the misery index down
Well, I think just the fact that Nixon was out. I think that probably helped. Yeah, um, you know, yeah
And inspire like consumer confidence and the like
So it cracked back down to 12.66, but not enough to keep um
Um, uh, the democrats and jimmy carter from coming into office and carter actually cited the misery index
Yeah, it was relatively new at the time. Yeah, he talked too much about it
But it was it was a g whiz thing that you could really just point to like this plus this this is the misery index
Can you can you hear me? Yeah, that's my
But um, that was his famous quote. Can you hear me?
It came back to haunt him though to say the least because he talked a lot about the misery index and then in his
Uh term the uh, it reached an all-time high of 21.98. Yeah, which man
I really think that shock to the system under the oil embargo
Um, and plenty of other stuff this stuff gets laid at carter's feet. I think unfairly in a lot of respects
well, I mean
I would love for someone to really that really knows their stuff to explain to me
Exactly how much a president's influence has on the economy and how long it takes for that to bear fruit
Yeah, I would love to know that too. I think though, uh, the guy who came after carter reagan
Is a pretty sterling unassailable example of an impact a president can have on the economy
Whether you agree with his politics or his economic policies or not
He most decidedly had an effect on the economy. Yeah, I just remember hearing one time
I need to look this up
But somebody told me once that the the economic impact of a presidential a four-year term
Is felt the most like eight years later or something. Yeah, that makes sense to me economies don't move on a dime
Yeah, I just I don't know if that's correct lumbering things. They aren't fully understood by anybody
Yeah, it's interesting to me now more than ever before though because remember economics used to just bore me
I know I was really really surprised when you suggested this one. It's slightly more interesting to me now. What changed?
Oh, just wondering things like that and during an election season. Yeah, like
Are the decisions we make now gonna affect us in one year or two years eight years?
Yeah, well if there's any economists who are still listening after that initial remark about the new astrology
We'd love to get a primer on how long it takes for a president to impact an economy if they do at all
And I'm sure it's a range, you know, sure. It's not like starting at eight years
And really honestly was Carter that band or was he a victim of cross-stars?
Yeah, I mean that you can make a case where a lot of
ills of presidency is not being directly at their feet. Well, you remember that uh
That simpsons where they unveiled a statue of jimmy carter in springfield and on the pedestal
It says malaise forever and somebody goes jimmy carter. He's history's greatest monster
Poor Carter
So, uh, like we said that came back to haunt carter because he talked a lot about the index at rose a lot
Then reagan came in was like, well, let's talk about that misery index that you like to talk about so much
Right, that's at an all-time high reagan got in there. Um, knocked it down to nine point five five
By the end of his term enough to get bush senior in
It inched up some then clinton was able to uh, it didn't go up that much though
And I read an interesting article today on
Whether or not ross perot really got clinton elected because that's sort of the popular thought he was a spoiler. Yeah, I could see that but, um
He was definitely more in line with um bush seniors policies than clinton's well or at the time
Yeah, you would think but I read uh, I read one article that said that it was kind of a myth that
basically that clinton won by six million votes and it would have taken
75 percent of perot supporters to have
uh
been aligned with um with bush
And supposedly exit polls showed showed it more like 38 to 40 percent. Um, and so they're saying it's sort of a myth that perot
Swung the election to clinton. I see but I mean that was one person's opinion. So who knows?
You know, I've been reading a lot about you know, that
We that that suspicion you can't quite kick that there's really no difference between
Republicans and democrats these days that they're really just kind of all in the same little club
I think people feel that way sometimes. I've been reading a lot about that and apparently it's all
Based on neoliberalism. That's like the key. Oh, yeah, and um,
There's there's a lot of if you look into neoliberalism and the policies of neoliberalism
You realize we're like living in the thick of it
But no one everyone's kind of blind to the idea that it's just a single thing that basically everybody in power subscribes to
Right and that it it has a um a trickle down effect of screwing over everybody below the top
Yeah, um, but just the name itself seems totally fine, you know, but it's uh
It's it's interesting. Yeah, I researched that a little bit lately too. Yeah, there's some good article. We totally should. Yeah
Let's do it. Chuck. Agreed man. We're gonna get some emails for that one
from billionaires
Yeah, um, so let's just finish out this quick little recap
Clinton brought it down to seven point three five
Things were great. Bush jr gets elected
Um, despite the fact that Clinton had a low index. Well, it depends on how you look at the 2000 election
We should do one on that one too
But this is the this is that's considered one of those rare instances where the misery index didn't indicate where it was going to go
But you could also say
It might have sure had things gone slightly differently in the supreme court
Uh, george w bush, uh, the index rose from seven point three five to eleven point four
And then obama came in it went down to seven point eight seven
but another weird flaw in the system
is exposed there because um
Despite the fact that the misery index was lower
Uh, things were not good. The stock market had crashed
Um unemployment was rising at a rapid rate
And they said, you know, this it basically was another example of like look this misery index isn't all it's cracked up to be
Right, so let's work on it. Yeah, I think a lot of people said this is too simplistic
You you can't rely on this. Yeah, we'll talk about some of the um
Additional factors that people have worked into the misery index after this
Hey, I'm lance bass host of the new ihard podcast frosted tips with lance bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Uh, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because i'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god
Seriously, I swear and you won't have to send an sos because i'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so my husband michael um, hey, that's me
Yep, we know that michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life step by step
Oh, not another one
Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life
Oh, just stop now. If so tell everybody you everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen
So we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with the lance bass on the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm mongesh aticular and to be honest
I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born
It's been a part of my life in india. It's like smoking. You might not smoke
But you're gonna get secondhand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you
It got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams cancelled marriages kpop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world came crashing down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer. I think your ideas are going to change too
Listen to skyline drive and the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
Here's to the great american settlers
The millions of you who settled for unsatisfying jobs because they pay the bills and uh
You just kind of fell into it and you know, it's like totally fine
Just another few decades or so and then you can enjoy yourself
Of course, there is something else you could do if you got something to say
You could oh, I don't know start a podcast with speaker from iHeart
And unleash your creative freedom and spend all day researching and talking about stuff you love
And maybe even earn enough money to one day tell your irritating boss as you quit and walk off into the sunset
Hey, I'm no settler. I'm an explorer
Spreaker.com. That's a sbr
eak er
Salon over today
All right chuck so the misery index
Oaken everybody's happy with him. Yeah, they're like this is just too simple
Especially in what's called the post stagflation era after the oil embargo. Yeah
um
and
So some people have said, okay, you can there's certainly there's other things you can add in to give a genuine true snapshot
Of what the conditions are like on the ground as it were right?
Well, yeah, not only what the conditions are but whether or not performance over a period of time is getting better getting worse
Yes, and you know rather than say oh under
Under this president the misery index was this, you know, and it gives you a pretty good idea. Yeah
The this with this one guy named Robert Barrow
He wrote a 1996 book called getting it right markets and choices in a free society and in it
He takes the misery index Oaken's misery index and he says
We can add some stuff to this to make it an even clearer picture
Not just of the conditions on the ground, but you can take it and apply it
Genuinely to a president's entire term to see just how good their economic policies were or weren't for the health of the economy
Yeah, and he added some other stuff. Yeah, he added four main new measurements
Uh, took the inflation rate during the last year of the president's term compared it to the average
inflation rate over the entire course of the
subsequent president's term which is based on what you were saying that like
The uh, a four-year term right the effects are felt like years down the road. Sure. So I think that's what he was doing there, right?
Yeah, it makes sense
I did the same thing with the rate of unemployment. Uh, that was number two
He added in changes for the 30 year government bond yield
over presidency
And then finally he said, um, I need to look at the difference between the the long-term gdp growth
The real rate of growth right compare all these things along with the original
This plus this equals this right and with the real growth rate. Um, that's where you take
The actual change either the shrinking or the growth of the economy the gdp year over year
Right. Yes, and he took that for year after year over the course of a presidency and averaged it out. I guess that's right
Yeah, and he came up with what's called the barrow misery index
And um, a lot of people think that that's where the misery index started when in fact it was oaken who came up with it
Uh, about 20 years before barrow
Took it up and improved it. Yeah
So under barrow's misery index, um, clinton and ragan, uh, this bill clinton, of course, came out on top
Uh, and then a guy named steve hanky about 10 years later. This was originally in 1996 and then hanky came along in 2006
And said, you know what? We need to add even more things and this all just makes sense
You need to if you want a more detailed picture then add more detail to the data going in, you know, right?
So he said we need more detail
Uh, why don't we do this? Let's um
Let's measure inflation and unemployment like we're doing and then let's now add interest rates and subtract annual
percentages from the gdp to get a more accurate picture, right?
And he said you can use this anywhere you can use it all over the world
Well, that's what he did and that's kind of what made his uh, his version of it pretty famous
He figured out how to apply it to other countries even countries that used, um
Price controls to keep inflation in check, which means price inflation is held back artificially
So hanky looked into other things like, um, the exchange rate in the black market in a given country, that kind of thing
Um, and he figured out real inflation rates and he applied it around the world to find out what country is the most miserable and what country is the least miserable
And what he found in 2014 was that the most miserable country in the world was venezuela
Yeah, which had a hanky misery index, uh, of 79.4
It's pretty high very high, uh, and then japan had the the lowest misery at 5.41
Yeah, the u.s. Came in at about 19
Correct, I think 11. Oh 11th. Yeah. No, no, 11 was our oh, I'm sorry 19th. Yeah. Yeah, you're right ranked 19th
Yes, with an 11 rating. I didn't hear that. Yeah, that's because my tooth is still gone
Because my tooth is still gone
You'd think it'd be it'd be more pronounced
The th's if it were 19th
I would have heard it clear as well
august
Can't get here soon enough
so, um
There are critics of this one too though. There's critics of all these indexes. Well, yeah, the a lot of them say no
Still too
Yeah, some people say this is all just tripe like you can't sure you can't use this stuff to to make any real predictions
You could use it to look back at the past but to use it for the future probably not
But some people do believe in the idea that if you have enough data
And the right kind of data you can get a clear picture of misery and again, that's what we're after here
like the whole point of the misery index is to figure out how
unhappy and
And just low the average person in a country is feeling at that moment. Yeah, right? So, um
Huffpo actually came up with a pretty good one Huffpo
boo
Yay in 2009
Huffpo came up with what they called the real misery index, right?
and so a lot of
People cite the the use of what's called u3
Unemployment statistics. Yeah, which when you hear unemployment numbers in the news, that's what you're hearing
That's what the bureau of labor statistics issues as the official unemployment numbers, right?
Yeah, and that's the very first thing that people will say if they want to poo poo
The unemployment numbers that that these are these are just false numbers. Yeah, if someone says hey man
Look how great x president is doing look at the unemployment rate, right?
Man, they're just using the u3 right they need to use the u6 wake up pal
Yeah, open your eyes, which is you know is valid. Well. Yeah, so um the bls has six
Measurements of unemployment you won through u6
And u6 is the broadest. Yeah, it includes people who are so discouraged with the state of the job market
That they've given up looking for work and are just like have given themselves over entirely to
uh, judge alex sure right and then um
It also includes people who are working part-time, but wish they could work full-time, but there's no full-time work available
Yeah, like i'm a graphic designer, but i work at starbucks. So that's the u6
Measurement and that's considered the the broadest snapshot of unemployment the real
Um vision of unemployment. Yeah, like you said mostly they use u3
I guess because it's in the middle. I mean you won they would never use
u2
Everybody used to like but not anymore
I still like u2. Do you good? Yeah, you know not like i used to i'm not poo pooing anything
but
I did see that concert they did on the hbo
And I have to hand it to him my big problem with u2 for years
It was uh, they just got so out of control with those live shows
Like these giant spider spaceships and things and right
I was always of the belief that man you need to go back to basics
And just get up on stage and play again. Yeah, and that's what they did with this new tour
I mean there was a cool visual element, but the stage set up in the way they did it was very much back to basics
And that's cool. I think they really connected with fans again. Yeah, that's kind of help. Yeah, because
You can only when the when the interactions between you and the fans rather than the fans and giant spiders
Yeah, you just you can only go so far in that direction. I think they realize that sure
Anyway, where'd it go u2? I'll defend those guys
um
Even though I know everyone in the world generally wants to punch bono in the face
I know i'm not one of them. It's gotta feel weird. I like him
Yeah, I'm on record sure
Bono if you're listening
Well, if you're uh Jared indicator is any any predictor bono is going to come out to be canonized one day
If what? Oh, yeah, yeah, you know, you're like there's something about Jared
I don't like him and you know, we found out about Jared right and then um, so now you're saying bono like bono good guy
Something's good like they're gonna find a cure for cancer in a saliva or something. You never know
um, so
Did we even mention what the huffbow what kind of outrageous numbers they came up with?
No, well, we didn't mention everything they use we were talking about the u6 measurement
Huffbow used that measurement the most extreme one of unemployment numbers
They also used other things like the inflation rate of food and drink
and fuel and healthcare
Because other the misery index just uses the consumer price index, which is inflation as a whole right huffbow used
The the inflation of some really essential things that people can't do without yeah
And where you're gonna immediately feel the pinch when prices go up with those key factors, right?
Um, they also included the rate of credit card delinquency the cost of housing how many people are using food stamps
That seems like a smart move totally home equity loan deficiencies. I guess people who are laid on their payments
Um, and then they took the average of those seven numbers and added it to the u6 unemployment numbers, which
Here you can step back and say wait a minute. How would you how are you adding this together?
How does this make any sense? You can't just keep adding things, right? And really you can take that all the way back to the
Initial misery index like what you're just adding unemployment percentage and inflation and all of a sudden you have a magic number
That doesn't make any sense
This huffbow metric really points out the inherent flaw in it. I think yeah, because in 2008 the oaken misery index was
8.1, but huffbow's real misery index
AKA you think things are bad here's how bad they really are index was 29.9 compared to the 8.1
Right and some people are like, oh, well, that just shows how off the oaken misery index is. Yeah
Who knows?
I know they quit doing the real misery index at huffbow like five years ago. I think it was a
Am I gonna call it a stunt? It was a bit of a stunt
Maybe but I'm sure really what happened was the
Writer who is contributing it for free like left for a paying job
That's probably what happened is a huffbow real misery index. Yeah, you're probably right. Um, I was reading this guy
Tim McMahon. He has a site or he writes for a site. I'm not sure it's his or not called inflationdata.com
Jim McMahon, Tim. Oh, his brother. Gotcha. Not the Super Bowl shuffle. No, his brother
Um, so he he mentioned this 2001 paper that concluded that unemployment causes 1.7 times more misery than inflation
And so if you're doing any kind of misery index that uses those two
You need to first multiply the unemployment number by 1.7 before adding it to
The inflation number to to properly weight it. Yeah, I'm like, how did they come up with that?
So I looked at the paper and it was actually pretty clever. There's like 23 years of the survey of life satisfaction and happiness
that these researchers looked at back in 2001 and they found that
Economically based or just like how happy are you? No, here's the thing. It was how happy are you?
It was like a single question like would you say based on how you're feeling right now that you are fairly satisfied?
Unsatisfied very satisfied with your life right now, right?
And then they took that that measurement for that that country as a whole and you can do this for any country that participated in the survey
and then they looked at inflation and then they looked at
unemployment for those years and they could figure out the the variation between
or the the interplay between unemployment and inflation and satisfaction and they found that uh, the that um
That unemployment was one time 1.7 times
more miserable than inflation in regards to life satisfaction as that survey goes pretty clever.
It's a lot of hocus pocus, but it's I thought it was pretty clever how they did it. That makes sense to me because to be without work
Like if you have a job and things inflation is happening, you still have your job. Sure. And you're like, man
This sucks to pay this much more, but you can still conceivably pay for it. Yeah, I'll cut back here or there
Right. If you if you're unemployed, then there's not a lot of hope. Right. Yeah one that number might be conservative. Yeah. Yeah, I agree with you
Very interesting stuff
sir, so that's uh
That's it man. That's the misery index
You got anything else? No, but I'm looking forward to hearing from economists
That me too like in an unbiased way try to explain things me too if you if you send just you know these crazy political emails and
They're they're going to fall in deaf ears because everyone yells at each other that they're right. I just want to hear some real numbers. Yeah
Do it Chuck
Uh, if you want to know more about the misery index, you can type those words in the search bar house to forks.com
And since they said search bar just plain old search bar. It's time for listener mail
Uh, I'm going to call this uh
Follow-up on vocal fry once again. Oh, yeah
Oh, yeah, um regarding vocal fry guys, uh
You guys were offended because someone said vocal fry was repulsive
But there is another side to this dudes. I suffer from a neurological disorder known as misophonia
Which we totally should do a show on this. I agree
Uh, it's a condition where a person has extreme emotional response to commonly occurring sounds
Uh, and I remember hearing a lot of times just like people chewing noises or gum or whatever
Um, he said in my case my trigger noise is the high pitched s sound. Uh, when some people speak
Uh, it feels like my brain is cringing as if an allergic reaction is taking place
Cannot stress enough. This is not a mere noise. It's a legitimate mental disorder that can vary great and uh, greatly in severity
Uh, I don't visibly freak out when I hear my trigger noise, but it really kills me inside
Uh, it gives me an instant headache and uh, it's why which is why I will get away from the noise if at all possible
Um, I believe in avoiding complaining in life and playing the victim
But this disorder really has made my life, uh, like a subtle hell
It's been especially toxic to my family relationships and my ability to learn in school
Um, I felt compelled to email you guys because you uh, definitely appreciate interesting medical conditions
I think it would be a great topic for a show someday
Uh, there's a documentary about it called quiet, please if you watch the trailer
You might be inspired to watch it to learn what the condition is. Oh, yeah
Uh, huge thanks to everyone of stuff. You should know you make mundane parts of my life interesting and educational
Uh, I'm gonna anonymize this. Okay from texas
Because I didn't hear back from them from tex
Yeah, tex uh ps was a disbelief when chuck said he had not seen billy madison or happy gilmore
That's a good ps. I believe it. It's a good post script and uh post
Pps right not ps s. I think it's post post script. Yeah, but people who often put ps s
It doesn't mean anything
Uh, do you think stuff you should know could ever become a television show? Well tex never
We actually did that we found out the hard way that it came. Yeah, we did a tv show on the science channel and uh
It ran for one full season that played out over the course of several days, which we'll always have chuck
We'll always have that season of television. We did once it lasted nine or ten days. Yeah, let's just show them all at once
Yeah out of order
But you never know we might get a another shot at stardom
But we're not looking to you know, I like it in this room where no one's looking at us. Yeah
Jerry doesn't even look at us. No, she's just there looking away and disgust. That's right
Uh, good idea about the mesophonia. I think we mentioned that before like that was I really like that vocal fry episode
And that was the one thing that I wish we would have mentioned because it's a legitimate thing that it does affect some people
Yeah, um, but yeah, look for a mesophonia episode at some point in the future tex
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