Classical forum hall with golden accents

Cantillon

2 essays in the Forum tagged "Cantillon".

← All essays
Watching the Cracks

The Saleability of Human Hours: Labor, AI, and the Mengerian Inversion Already Underway

The April 2026 jobs report looked healthy on the surface: 115,000 jobs added, unemployment steady at 4.3%, with monthly job growth averaging 76,000 across the year so far against the anemic 10,000 monthly average of 2025. Underneath the aggregate, the composition is shifting in ways the headline number cannot capture. Tech-sector layoffs reached 45,000 in Q1 2026 alone, with approximately 20% explicitly attributed to AI substitution — a share rising quarter over quarter. Healthcare, transportation, warehousing, and skilled trades grew. Ford CEO Jim Farley reported 5,000 open mechanic positions his company cannot fill at salaries reaching $120,000. Data-center electricians are earning $280,000 and the construction sector is short 349,000 workers in 2026 alone. The framework's reading: this is not a labor market in cyclical adjustment. It is the Mengerian saleability spectrum of human labor being structurally reordered in real time, with white-collar work AI can substitute losing saleability while physical work AI cannot perform gains it. The aggregate "labor market" is the wrong unit of analysis. This essay applies Menger's six saleability criteria to labor itself, engages Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei's "white-collar bloodbath" prediction directly, and traces what the inversion means for households navigating it.

labor marketsAIMengersaleabilityCantillonskilled tradeswhite collarcredentialsDario AmodeiFekete
Watching the Cracks

The Lag: What Hormuz Will Cost the American Household, and When

Supply shocks propagate to consumer prices on calendar time, not news-cycle time. The quantitative easing rounds of 2008-2014 took two to three years to produce their peak consumer price effect. The post-COVID monetary expansion took eighteen to twenty-four months. The Strait of Hormuz disruption that began on February 28, 2026 is a structurally different shock — supply-side rather than monetary — but the calendar mechanics of how it reaches the American household are similar in form and timing. This essay traces the propagation channel by channel, anchors each in empirical pass-through estimates from the academic literature, accounts for the strategic reserve buffers that are masking the early-stage impact, and produces specific framework predictions for what the American household should expect over the next 24 months. The calendar math says peak household impact arrives in Q1-Q2 2027, regardless of when the disruption itself resolves.

Strait of Hormuzoil shockinflation lagsupply chainfertilizerLNGstrategic petroleum reserveFeketeMengerCantillonmonetary theory