Author Topic: Misery Index: The Obama Depression - "Private sector doing just Fine"  (Read 152290 times)

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Gallup Finds U.S. Unemployment at 9.2% in Mid-May
Gallup.com ^ | May 17, 2011 | by Dennis Jacobe, Chief Economist
Posted on May 17, 2011 11:45:15 AM EDT by Oldeconomybuyer

Underemployment is 19.1% -- essentially the same as a year ago.

PRINCETON, NJ -- Unemployment, as measured by Gallup without seasonal adjustment, is at 9.2% in mid-May -- down slightly from 9.4% at the end of April. It is also slightly lower than the 9.4% of mid-May last year.

The percentage of part-time workers who want full-time work is at 9.9% in mid-May -- the same as at the end of April. Just as many Americans are now working part time but seeking full-time work as was the case a year ago.

Underemployment, a measure that combines the percentage of unemployed with the percentage working part time but wanting full-time work, was at 19.1% in mid-May -- down from 19.3% at the end of April. Underemployment remains as high as it was in mid-May 2010.

(Excerpt) Read more at gallup.com ...

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So 2 of the 3 things making health care costs skyrocket are made worse by CommieCare?  Nice, just like what obama wants, collapse the nation.  Same with energy prices.   


http://thehill.com/blogs/healthwatch/health-insurance/161867-report-medical-costs-to-rise-85-percent-in-2012-in-small-part-due-to-healthcare-law?page=4#comments




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Underemployment at 19 Percent, Unchanged in a Year
Townhall.com ^ | May 18. 2011 | Mike Shedlock
Posted on May 18, 2011 7:47:34 PM EDT by Kaslin

The most recent Gallup survey pegs US unemployment at 9.2%. That is not significantly different from the BLS report at 9.0%. However, the Gallup numbers are not seasonally adjusted the BLS unemployment rate is.

Comparing not seasonally adjusted numbers, Gallup shows a .2 percentage point drop in the last year while the BLS reports an improvement of .8 percentage points. Month after month the BLS is consistently lower. Counting part-time workers the Gallup results are even worse.

Gallup Pegs Underemployment at 19.1%, Same as 1 Year Ago

Please consider Gallup Finds U.S. Unemployment at 9.2% in Mid-May

Unemployment, as measured by Gallup without seasonal adjustment, is at 9.2% in mid-May -- down slightly from 9.4% at the end of April. It is also slightly lower than the 9.4% of mid-May last year.

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Weekly Claims See Fall, (409k) But Jobs Picture Remains Weak
CNBC ^ | 05-19-2011 | Staff




New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits fell more than expected last week, but a rise in the four-week moving average to a six-month high indicated the labor market recovery will remain painfully slow.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 29,000 to a seasonally adjusted 409,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday, continuing to unwind the prior weeks spike.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims dropping to 420,000. The prior weeks figure was revised up to 438,000 from the previously reported 434,000. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims, a better measure of underlying trends, rose 1,250 to 439,000 - the highest level since mid-November.

The data covers the survey period for the governments closely watched employment report for May, which will be released early next month.

The recent jump in claims, blamed on auto layoffs because of supply chain disruptions from March's Japanese earthquake and problems with adjusting data for seasonal variations, had raised fears of a pull back in the pace of job creation.


(Excerpt) Read more at cnbc.com ...


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O-pocalypse Now
Townhall.com ^ | May 19, 2011 | John Ransom


________________________ ________________________ _____


Reuters reports that the markets fell below their 50-day moving averages this week on news that housing is softer than expected and there's a slump in factory output.

Hewlett Packard disappointed too and that's hurting tech stocks.

"HP, the world's largest technology company, cut its financial forecasts because of problems stemming from Japan's earthquake," says Reuters, "soft PC sales and lowered expectations for its service business. HP's stock was down 6.5 percent at $37.21."

The lesson is that the stock market is all about earnings. Forget Japan, Libya, et al.
 
More from Reuters: "This shows that we are kind of losing momentum ... and it is certainly disturbing considering that we are nearing the end of QE2," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago, referring to the U.S. monetary stimulus program known as QE2.


With talk like that can QE3 be far behind?

The market has done well during earnings season generally.

It's gone from a low of 1294 on the S&P to 1370 before starting this latest round of consolidation.

Much of the movement was based on strong earnings. As a backward glance, earnings are great. Certainly they are indicative of what the economy has done in the past.

Going forward however, there are indications that earnings could be a bit softer.

"We have had some data that has been softening so I guess we are going to experience a bit of a slowdown," said Frank Lesh, an analyst and broker at FuturePath Trading in Chicago according to Reuters.

Manufacturing data hit a five-month low in the recent NY survey. Europe and China have raised interest rates to combat inflation, which would imply a slowdown. Unemployment continues to be persistent. And the end of QE2 will dry up a source of liquidity that markets have counted on.

Our friend Mike Shedlock continues to think that China is headed for a bust. And so do I. 


On the plus side, the end of QE2 should take pressure off of commodity markets. If commodity prices come down in reponse to slowing global growth, and a tigher monetary policy, it could help create conditions for the mythical "soft-landing" the Fed is supposed to manufacture.

Of course a "soft landing" scenario should apply only to a recovery, which we haven't had.

How we got to the end of the business cycle where we are combating inflation without going through the middle of the business cycle- you know the part that creates wealth and jobs?-  is the story of the O-pocalypse. 

To be fair to Obama, the trend started before he was president. But his policies have certainly accelerated the process. Again, we've gone through a whole boom-and-bust business cycle (almost) without the nastiness of, um, jobs and wealth creation.

If he wants to tax the rich, he better do so while we have a few rich left.   

(Source: Barry Ritholtz)

 


 
The trendline on the S&P would suggest that the market is in a period not unlike that from 1971 to 1973 when the market attempted to break above the trend, but instead traded sideways for the next 9 years.

Interestingly, even after the market enjoyed an historic bull run in the 1980s, the S&P didn't break well above the trend until 1994.

The chart above puts in perspective the long-range nature of how markets react to events. Rather than being drivers of events, the markets are just reflections of things that are going on in society at large.

The period from 1966 to 1982 is a good exmaple of that. It looks like the economy was on drugs during that period, until the recovery began when it just said "no."

The drug of choice back then, of course, was dollars and government spending. 

Looking at a longer term perspective, it's a very good time to be investing in stocks if your investment horizon is 10-20 years or more.


Of course investing in stocks would give you extra incentive to give Obama the boot too.

For more on money and markets, take a look at our commentary every day at the Ticker.

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A member of the Fed (Evans) came out today ands said that (paraphrasing here)....

--- "QE2 is justified because of the stalling "recovery", poor employment and bad economic data"

I'd like to punch this asshole in the face. They can't accept that they have failed and doomed this nation to 20 years of the abyss. So, your plans of utterly failed and accomplished nothing (except making the rich richer and everyone else poorer) so that justifies your plans?

This fucksheads should be hanging from lamp posts.

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I especially like how these communists/leftists are trying to sping 400k weekly jobless claims considering we have the lowest labor particpation rate in decades. 


Do these communist pofs not understand the concept of "scale"?


400k weekly claims at this point is a disaster of mega-magnitude, but not to the obots of course.       

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Unions Panic as Reality Sets In: Obama’s EPA Will Kill ‘Tens of Thousands’ of Jobs
Posted by LaborUnionReport (Profile)
Friday, May 20th at 7:00AM EDT

http://www.redstate.com/laborunionreport/2011/05/20/unions-panic-as-reality-sets-in-obamas-epa-will-kill-tens-of-thousands-of-jobs






Union bosses dumped hundreds of millions of dollars of their members’ dues into getting Barack Obama elected. They chastised the racists in their ranks, downplayed his socialist rhetoric, and they thought he would be their union savior. Worse, union bosses put both their members’ money and their livelihoods in his hands. Apparently, union bosses could have their cake and eat it too (or so they thought).



In their rush to promote those so-called “green jobs” union bosses convinced themselves (and their members) that there would be no displacement, no job losses, no casualties or no pain in Obama’s plan of hope and change. They were wrong.

This would be the “hope” and “change” part of moving the American economy to a “green economy“:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed the first-ever national standards for mercury, arsenic and other emissions from power plants. The new power plant mercury and air toxics standards would require many power plants to install emissions control technologies to cut mercury, arsenic, chromium, nickel and acid gases emissions.

The updated standards will attempt to provide a level playing field for power plants across the country. The proposed rule provides up to four years for facilities to meet the standards and, once fully implemented, will prevent 91 percent of mercury in coal from being released into the air. EPA expects the new rule will support 31,000 short-term construction jobs and 9,000 long-term utility jobs.

This would be reality smacking the union bosses at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers squarely in the face…

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) said it believes a three-year timeframe for reducing emissions of carbon, mercury and other pollutants through the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Mercury and Air Toxics Standard is not realistic. The union is backing a bill calling for Congress to delay new rules on emissions from coal-fired power plants.

Union official said they have met with the EPA to discuss concerns and recognize the agency has limited discretion and flexibility in addressing compliance timelines because it is bound by federal court mandates.

The union said 50,000 jobs are at stake if power plants cannot get an extra five or six years to either clean up or shut down their oldest coal-fired power plants. Under the Clean Air Act, plants get three years with a possible one-year extension after that to install emissions control equipment.

And this would be reality hitting the United Mine Workers’ President Cecil Roberts in the face as well…

The Clean Air Act’s deadline for meeting the new regulations is just 36 months after the rules are finalized in November. EPA can grant a one-year extension on a case-by-case basis. While some generating units will be retrofitted with additional pollution controls to meet the standards, hundreds of smaller and older units will simply be closed.

Tens of thousands of jobs will be lost in the utility, coal and transportation sectors. Hundreds of communities will suffer as their tax bases shrink with the closure of nearby utility plants. Industrial states that were hit hard by the recession and still suffering from high unemployment will take another, needless hit.

To make matters worse, the new source limits EPA is proposing are so stringent that no new state-of-the-art power plant equipped with highly efficient scrubbers and other pollution controls could meet each of the multiple standards. Some of the new source standards are below the detection limits of current monitoring and testing equipment.

Unfortunately, union bosses either ignored Barack Obama (or were just plain ignorant) when he warned America of his plans back in 2008:



It didn’t take a rocket scientist to know that Obama’s plans would cost jobs—many of those jobs occupied by union members. Beyond the hype of ‘hope’ and ‘change,’ it’s become all too clear that union bosses sold their members a bill of goods.

It’s a good thing union bosses don’t build rockets.

_________________

“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776

X-posted.

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Unions Panic as Reality Sets In: Obama’s EPA Will Kill ‘Tens of Thousands’ of Jobs
Posted by LaborUnionReport (Profile)
Friday, May 20th at 7:00AM EDT

http://www.redstate.com/laborunionreport/2011/05/20/unions-panic-as-reality-sets-in-obamas-epa-will-kill-tens-of-thousands-of-jobs






Union bosses dumped hundreds of millions of dollars of their members’ dues into getting Barack Obama elected. They chastised the racists in their ranks, downplayed his socialist rhetoric, and they thought he would be their union savior. Worse, union bosses put both their members’ money and their livelihoods in his hands. Apparently, union bosses could have their cake and eat it too (or so they thought).



In their rush to promote those so-called “green jobs” union bosses convinced themselves (and their members) that there would be no displacement, no job losses, no casualties or no pain in Obama’s plan of hope and change. They were wrong.

This would be the “hope” and “change” part of moving the American economy to a “green economy“:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed the first-ever national standards for mercury, arsenic and other emissions from power plants. The new power plant mercury and air toxics standards would require many power plants to install emissions control technologies to cut mercury, arsenic, chromium, nickel and acid gases emissions.

The updated standards will attempt to provide a level playing field for power plants across the country. The proposed rule provides up to four years for facilities to meet the standards and, once fully implemented, will prevent 91 percent of mercury in coal from being released into the air. EPA expects the new rule will support 31,000 short-term construction jobs and 9,000 long-term utility jobs.

This would be reality smacking the union bosses at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers squarely in the face…

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) said it believes a three-year timeframe for reducing emissions of carbon, mercury and other pollutants through the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Mercury and Air Toxics Standard is not realistic. The union is backing a bill calling for Congress to delay new rules on emissions from coal-fired power plants.

Union official said they have met with the EPA to discuss concerns and recognize the agency has limited discretion and flexibility in addressing compliance timelines because it is bound by federal court mandates.

The union said 50,000 jobs are at stake if power plants cannot get an extra five or six years to either clean up or shut down their oldest coal-fired power plants. Under the Clean Air Act, plants get three years with a possible one-year extension after that to install emissions control equipment.

And this would be reality hitting the United Mine Workers’ President Cecil Roberts in the face as well…

The Clean Air Act’s deadline for meeting the new regulations is just 36 months after the rules are finalized in November. EPA can grant a one-year extension on a case-by-case basis. While some generating units will be retrofitted with additional pollution controls to meet the standards, hundreds of smaller and older units will simply be closed.

Tens of thousands of jobs will be lost in the utility, coal and transportation sectors. Hundreds of communities will suffer as their tax bases shrink with the closure of nearby utility plants. Industrial states that were hit hard by the recession and still suffering from high unemployment will take another, needless hit.

To make matters worse, the new source limits EPA is proposing are so stringent that no new state-of-the-art power plant equipped with highly efficient scrubbers and other pollution controls could meet each of the multiple standards. Some of the new source standards are below the detection limits of current monitoring and testing equipment.

Unfortunately, union bosses either ignored Barack Obama (or were just plain ignorant) when he warned America of his plans back in 2008:



It didn’t take a rocket scientist to know that Obama’s plans would cost jobs—many of those jobs occupied by union members. Beyond the hype of ‘hope’ and ‘change,’ it’s become all too clear that union bosses sold their members a bill of goods.

It’s a good thing union bosses don’t build rockets.

_________________

“I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as plain as ABC, hold up truth to your eyes.” Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776

X-posted.


I'm glad you posted this. He can't his dumbass, radical and stupid eco-agenda pushed through by using the law, congress and voting so he will go and use the unelected nut job EPA (who he's staffed with "his guys") to push through royal mandates.

What an idiot and what a joke.

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Geithner Says New Financial Crisis Coming
TBI/The Daily Beast ^ | 5-19-2011 | Lloyd Grove




Geithner Says New Financial Crisis Coming

Lloyd Grove, The Daily Beast
May 19, 2011, 2:12 PM

At a New York screening of the new HBO adaptation of Andrew Ross Sorkin’s Too Big to Fail, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said that not only is our financial system not too large to go bust—but we’re headed for another crisis.

The Wall Street meltdown of late 2008 was, in real life, a harrowing event, triggering a terrible recession from which we’re still recovering. In the HBO movie Too Big to Fail, it’s also a surprisingly gripping melodrama—a clash of greedheads and egomaniacs desperate to escape the consequences of their own bad behavior.

At various moments of high tension, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson (played by a bedraggled, unshaven William Hurt) flees an important meeting to stress-vomit in his private bathroom, and New York Federal Reserve President Timothy Geithner (a perfectly turned-out Billy Crudup) continually curses into his cell phone.

It's an alarming entertainment (premiering May 23 at 9 p.m.), and an even more disturbing memory. So having the real Geithner predict the coming of another big crisis was the last thing the well-heeled screening crowd at the Time Warner Center wanted to hear Tuesday night.

“It will come again. There will be another storm,” warned Geithner, who in early 2009 succeeded Paulson as treasury secretary. “But it’s not going to come for a while.”


(snip)


(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...

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Thursday, May 19, 2011
Economic Slowdown Is Already Here

ort=1" class="bbc_link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">http://www.comstockfunds.com/default.aspx?act=Newsletter.aspx&category=MarketCommentary&newsletterid=1585&menugroup=Home&AspxAutoDetectCookieSupp ort=1


 
 
Today's somewhat weak economic releases add to a pattern of recent tepid results from a number of economic indicators, and suggest that an economic slowdown is gathering steam even before the end of QE2.   We cite the following as evidence.

1)  Existing home sales for April were down 0.5% to 5.05 million as compared to 7.2 million at the peak.  Inventories of homes for sale increased to a 9.2 months, the highest since December while prices were down 5% from a year earlier.

2)  April housing starts dropped 10.2% to 523,000, barely above the recession lows, and below any level prior to 2008.  According to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) traffic of potential buyers was still extremely low.  Keep in mind that this is an organization that usually puts a positive spin on any results.

3)  While weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance declined to 409,000 from the prior week, the number has now been over 400,000 for six straight weeks after a period of coming in below that level.

4)  The Philadelphia Fed Index for May fell sharply to 3.9, losing 39.5 points in the last two months.  This is also well below the 1st quarter average of 32.9.  Both new and unfilled orders dropped significantly while inventories also declined, indicating that the inventory buildup that helped support the recovery may be moving back in line with demand, which has been growing less than production.

5)  Consistent with the above, April industrial production was flat.  It is likely that production, which had consistently been running ahead of demand, is being reduced as inventories that were depleted during the recession have now caught up.  This also may explain the higher level of initial claims.

6)  The Empire State Manufacturing Survey was also down 9.8 points to 11.9, the lowest level since December.  This index therefore confirms the Philly index and suggests similar lower results from the ISM manufacturing index.

7)  The April index of leading indicators declined 0.3%.  While one month does not make a trend it was the first monthly drop since last June, and fits in with what other indicators seem to be telling us.

8)  Similarly, the ECRI Weekly leading indictor has been down for three of the last five weeks and has been about flat since mid-December after rising steadily from the recession lows.  This is indicative of at least a pause in coming economic growth, and perhaps something worse.

9)  April core retail sales increased only 0.2%, and were probably flat to slightly down when adjusted for inflation.  Higher income from reduced social  security withholding was more than offset by higher gasoline prices, tepid wage increases, high unemployment, lower home prices and recessionary levels of consumer confidence.  And this is happening even before the end of QE2, which has been keeping the economy afloat since November.   

10)  The April Small Business Survey, after rising weakly from recession lows, has now dropped 3.1 points in the last two months.  Even at its most recent high it was below any level in its history prior to 2008.  Key segments that declined were plans to increase employment and capital expenditures.  In addition the number expecting sales to rise also dropped.

11)  In addition to the domestic concerns cited above, the global picture is also not looking too rosy.  ECRI's long leading indicator of global industrial growth peaked last August at 0.7 and stood at 0.1 in March.  ECRI managing director Lakshman Achuthan stated "There's a downturn in global industrial growth in clear sight".  EU production fell in March and retail sales have been flat for six months.  In the UK there's been no GDP growth for six months.  Japanese GDP dropped 3.7% annualized in the 1st quarter and 3.0% in the 4th.   Note that the earthquake occurred on March 11th, toward the end of the quarter, so cannot be fully blamed for the 1st quarter and not at all for the 4th.   Industrial output in all of the BRIC nations seems to be slowing, and current monetary and fiscal policies suggest more to come.

All in all it seems to us that the odds are high that a domestic and global economic slowdown is already in place.  In the U.S. the slowdown is happening with only six weeks to go before the end of QE2, a program that has been a major prop for even the tepid recovery we've undergone so far.  For the stock market nothing seems to matter until, suddenly, it does.  Recall 1999 and 2007 when the market stayed high despite the obvious problems that were there for all to see.  The S&P closed today at virtually the same level it first reached on February 9th, and is most likely in the process of forming a top.  In our view the potential breakdown is close at hand.
 

 

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The Coming Deflationary Contraction
American Thinker ^ | May 22, 2011 | Peter Raymond




Determining when the next great liquidation will occur is impossible to predict with any degree of certainty; nevertheless it is fair to say the sooner the better.  Economic liquidation is a restorative process that corrects the harm done by inflationary policies.  If accepting of this premise, then liquidations or deflationary depressions cannot be considered the disease in need of cure which unfortunately has been the position of economic interventionists since the early 1920's.


Instead, they are a necessary and unavoidable adjustment after years of excessive credit expansions have destabilized the economy.  Efforts to further delay these self-corrections by instituting a series of escalating inflationary policies only needlessly extends and deepens economic woes and increases the size and scope of the inevitable adjustment.  With the increasingly aggressive actions of the world's central banks and governments over the last decade to inflate the monetary supply, it seems a safe bet the next liquidation phase, when it does finally take place, will be a very large and abrupt correction.



Already, the ominous signs of economic stress caused by historic intervention measures are becoming evident.  Despite the extraordinary monetary and fiscal policies to ward off deflationary pressures and economic contraction, prices are once again signaling that certain sectors of the economy would quickly liquidate if the stabilization programs in place were lifted.  Home and auto prices for example have been pushing through a series of price support schemes and headed to lower levels in spite of a rapidly depreciating dollar.  Also, the recent increase in volatility in both the commodity and currency markets is suggestive of price distortions generated by the Federal Reserve's ongoing quantitative easing programs.


The combined initiatives of policymakers and central bankers to suspend economic forces to create the impression of a recovery and price stability can go on for only so long before the building wave of deflation can no longer be contained.  Not even the most ambitious plans to flood the economy with easy money can prevent the eventual contraction of the economy and a general fall in prices.  It has been tried before and it does not work. There is of course a cost for such heavy-handed intervention.  The longer and more aggressively a market correction is delayed by predictably ad hoc measures of panicking policymakers, the greater the size and duration of the liquidation.


Perhaps most concerning is the continued arrogance of the present day interventionists.  They are never in want of self-confidence or devotion to their policies.  Unfortunately, their conventional wisdom continues to justify radical inflationary measures as a means to indefinitely hold off a liquidation cycle and miraculously jumpstart another period of economic expansion.  Nearly four years after the first indications of looming economic trouble appeared in the second half of 2007, these tinkering central planners now seem willing to sacrifice the dollar in order to defeat the deflationary pressures their previous inflationary policies fostered in the first place.  Needless to say, it will be utterly demoralizing to witness the expected ramp up of desperate actions by these frustrated interventionists utterly dumbfounded by their repeated failures to stimulate economic growth.  Of course, they will never acknowledge their actions prolonged and aggravated economic decline.


So what happens when the liquidation process of a depression begins in spite of the slew of much touted countermeasures that are soon followed by heated accusations of interventionists looking to assign fault to hapless scapegoats?  It entails a dramatic fall in prices and production of nearly every non-essential good and service until price and production reach levels supported by market conditions.  Wages, durables, equities, and real estate will plunge at an alarming rate.  Labor unions and major industrialists will unsuccessfully try to shield themselves from deflation and job losses by demanding the government implement price and production controls.  But government can do nothing long term to bolster artificially high price levels and will only further decimate the economy by trying.  In fact, stabilization efforts during a liquidation period often cause prices to sink far below where they would otherwise have been under a passive policy.  Sadly, unemployment does spike, especially in high order industries until wages adjust much lower.  This is truly an unpleasant affair, but completely necessary and usually short lived.


Although it is counterintuitive and obviously controversial, it is imperative to allow the monetary supply to contract and interest rates to rise while simultaneously reducing public spending.  Without such action or, in many instances, inaction, the economy will only be further disrupted and recovery delayed.  Even something as innocuous and seemingly compassionate as extending unemployment income has the unintended consequence of delaying reemployment and economic recovery.  It is interesting to note that prior to the New Deal, private charitable organizations strongly opposed government funding of humanitarian efforts including unemployment income.  They correctly argued charity was best left in the private sector.


Such austerity and money tightening measures employ exactly the opposite philosophy cooked up by Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, and later expanded upon while president, to "counter attack" depressions and supposedly avert economic ruin.  Amazingly, Hoover's basic premise that government action is the "better option" has not lost any of its appeal to this day.


By the way, do not believe the revisionists' false portrayal of Hoover as ever favoring a laissez faire approach with the economy before or during the depression.  Hoover was an enthusiastic central planner who frequently boasted of his intervention successes in 1931 when it was thought government stopped the depression with its numerous command and control programs.  And records prove the Federal Reserve was pouring cash into the reserves of national banks trying in vain to expand credit.  The shrinking of bank reserves was the result of a justifiable loss of faith in the banking industry leading to abnormally high demand for physical possession of legal tender.


To his credit, Hoover ignored the rather stunning proposals put forth by leading industrialists and labor leaders to institute full blown national planning, much of which was supposed to emulate the then en vogue Soviet model.  Many of their ideas would emerge later under the disastrous New Deal policies of the FDR administration.  Had he complied with their requests, Hoover would have joined the ranks of other prominent Marxist leaders of that period and not just another failed interventionist who spent the remainder of his life vigorously defending his actions to the very end.


Some unexpected developments can occur as a result of liquidation, barring any massive government intervention.  First, there is normally a strengthening of the currency as the monetary base contracts.  So in our case, the dollar's current downward trajectory would conceivably reverse course, causing the price of dollar-based commodities to fall as a result. Surprisingly, gold and silver prices fall as well in response to rising interest rates on savings and the strengthening currency.  There recent selling of gold holdings by George Soros and other large hedge funds may presage a reversal of gold prices and dollar valuation.  Second, falling wages do not automatically translate into a loss of purchasing power.  This is because the drop in prices for most goods and services will normally outpace wages declines.  Those lucky enough to remain employed throughout a depression will enjoy an increase in purchasing power even when adjusting for wage reductions.  This phenomenon is just the opposite of what occurs in an inflationary environment where wage earners experience an erosion of purchasing power over time.  Allowed to run its course, liquidation is very rapid and the majority of unemployed return to work in less than a year, albeit at much lower wages and mercifully without much change to the average standard of living.


It is the affluent investors that bear both the immediate and long term brunt of the losses since the price of equities, hard assets, and real estate collapse and remain suppressed for quite some time.  This outcome seems rather fitting since the wealthy are the primary beneficiaries and supporters of inflationary policies.


The all-important point is that the disruptive oscillations of the economy are the unfortunate consequence of interventionism and inflationary monetary policies generating boom and bust cycles.  The policymakers and central bankers deserve the total blame for these swings of the entire economy and not speculators, consumers, or producers.  These cycles are certainly not attributable to some ludicrous theory citing mysterious shifts in overall consumption causing over or under consumption.  Until such time government is prevented from manipulating the economy and the monetary supply, inflationary expansions followed by deflationary contractions, along with the misery they produce, will be a permanent and inescapable part of our future.


Admittedly, nearly a century of indoctrination has created the expectation and confidence governments can and must take action in every economic crisis.  It would be politically untenable for all but the staunchest non-interventionists to maintain a passive stance during a depression.  By far the majority of policymakers succumb to the demands of hard pressed constituents, even if it is known such actions would ultimately hurt the people they are meant to assist.


This brings me to the recent remarks made by the economist Joseph Stiglitz where he declared austerity measures are essentially a failed "experiment that has been tried before" which destroys jobs and undermines economic recovery.  Naturally, the first question that comes to mind is: Where and when have austerity measures been proven to be ineffective in dealing with economic contractions?  During the last depression, government actions incorporating most of Stiglitz's preferred spending policies yielded an unmitigated humanitarian disaster that dragged on for nearly a decade.  Surely, it would seem unreasonable for Stiglitz to consider the New Deal "experiment" as even remotely effective in ending or even shortening the depression, let alone creating or saving jobs.  Then again, nothing about the public intellectuals from the left shocks me anymore.


The conspicuous flaw with the interventionist logic is the fundamental belief wealth is created by consumption; the more that is consumed, the greater the wealth creation.  Therefore, economic interventionism is centered on maintaining wage and price levels in order to maintain a targeted rate of consumption.  In reality, it is production that creates wealth.  And the wealth created by production is what results in greater consumption.  Interventionists have the cart before the horse.


It is this nonsensical reversal in the order of wealth creation that leads to the erroneous conclusion that net prosperity is increased by more evenly redistributing wealth and expanding public spending.  Since both are thought to increase overall consumption, interventionists reason the national prosperity will grow as a result of their economic and social engineering schemes.  Interventionists are so beholden to the idea of wealth being created by consumption that they have derived out of thin air a formula to calculate how much government "investments" will grow the GNP.  Somehow a dollar confiscated from the private sector through taxation magically produces more than a dollar in economic activity when spent by government. 


In practice, such government spending sprees have a highly corrosive effect on the economy and employment by removing much-needed funds normally set aside for productive purposes, and instead using them for consumption.   Since government, by and large, is a massive consumer of goods and services that uses the funds taken from the private sector, it contributes relatively little to production or investment no matter the level of spending.


The idea that government spending acts as an additional factor in the economy, and thus a productive investment, most likely comes from its odd inclusion in the GNP numbers.  This undoubtedly obscures the negative impact public spending has on economic growth and prosperity.   That fact that GNP was first introduced in 1934 in the midst of the New Deal era should arouse the suspicion of critical thinkers, however.


Because government spending is largely representative of consumption and not production, the coerced private sector contributions funding public spending is in fact a burden on the private sector that actually reduces overall production and wealth creation.  This is why during any economic downturn it is best to reduce and not increase government spending in order to lessen the drain on private sector capital.  Otherwise, there is less private capital available to invest in production and aid in the recovery process.  Advocates of consumption-oriented economic policies are unwilling to accept that no manner or amount of government spending, whether or not it is referred to as an investment, can duplicate let alone outperform the positive return of voluntary private sector investment in production.


The overriding issue that will complicate our economic recovery is the massive national debt.  A drop in tax revenues and any increase in the value of the dollar that normally accompanies a liquidation cycle will push the nation closer to insolvency as the economy works its way through monetary excesses.  Also, the interest on the national debt will become an inescapable and growing drag on the private sector as interest rates rise from historic lows.  These are the unfortunate consequences of a fiscally reckless government continuously accruing debt for over a generation. There is little doubt the Federal Reserve will continue their crusade to depreciate the dollar in order to facilitate deficit spending and lower the cost burden of the national debt.  However, these inflationary efforts will likely fail to hold off a deflationary contraction for much longer.


Contrary to the predictions for the complete ruination of the dollar, I anticipate quite the opposite.  In the near term, inflationary pressures will certainly continue to build and may surge for a short time, just before a sudden reversal occurs marking the beginning of a liquidation cycle and rapid deflation.  Strange as it may sound, I believe the onset of a deflationary depression offers the best hope of salvaging the dollar and ending the reign of the inflationists.  Growing public awareness and displeasure over the harm done by inflationary policies and runaway government spending may leave no option available to policymakers other than returning to the gold standard thereby forcing fiscal and monetary restraint.

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A Sign of Desperation at the Fed
Economic Policy Journal ^ | 05/23/2011 | Economic Policy Journal




Thanks to Ben Bernanke's new monetary "tools", the Federal Reserve continues to operate in panic mode. Specifically, because the Fed now pays interest on reserves held by banks at the Federal Reserve, excess reserves are piling up at the Fed at a remarkable rate.

There are now $1.5 trillion in excess reserves just sitting there that could explode and hit the economy at anytime and cause huge price inflation. There has never, ever, before Bernanke started paying interest on reserves so much of an overhang in excess reserves. In the month before the Fed started paying interest on excess reserves, September 2008, excess reserves stood at only $27 billion.

Here's the difference between then and now:

THEN: 27,000,000,000

NOW: 1,500,000,000,000

Here's a graph of the situation:


(Excerpt) Read more at economicpolicyjournal.co m ...

Bindare_Dundat

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Gold is back to 1520/oz, silver is at 35/oz. Both making nice moves upwards. I think they are going to blow past the recent highs as things start to get worse again.

Soul Crusher

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Gold is back to 1520/oz, silver is at 35/oz. Both making nice moves upwards. I think they are going to blow past the recent highs as things start to get worse again.

Hey - life is grand - bama sipping $1,000 wine, galavanting all over the globe, starting wars all over the place, things are great. 

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This is What Stagflation Looks Like
Townhall.com ^ | May 24, 2011 | John Ransom





Even as world equity markets move down with signs pointing to slowing global economic growth, a European Central Bank member is warning about inflation.

"We have to take seriously the April rise in long-term inflation expectations and take it as a sign of increasing price perspectives when monetary policy is expansive," said Jens Weidmann, the head of Germany's Bundesbank.

Translation: We need to tighten up money to combat inflation.

Tighter money supply means slower growth.

Of course, with protestors gathered all over the world asking for more handouts, it's possible that we could see governments loosen monetary policy to give out even more handouts.


In that case, inflation would, of course, quicken its pace.

There is one alternative between raising interest rates and pumping more money into the system.     

The government should consider slashing government regulations and taxes so as to create more friendly free market economies that produce more tax revenues.

The central problem that economies worldwide face is not a lack of money.

The central problem is a lack of confidence by the business community to make plans for investment. Banks still have lots of cash and assets on their balance sheets, but not enough of it is making its way into the economy.

In short, there is a lot of money, but not enough of it is yours or mine. This is what stagflation looks like. Concentrated pools of money chase the price of goods up; and you and I pay. 

A couple things can be done to change the confidence level for American businesses and get money back to Main Street.

The president should grant a blanket waiver for everyone on the implementation of Obamacare. It was a misconceived idea that is hanging around the neck of the economy. That’s why we are seeing so many waivers granted.


But more importantly, the House and Senate should repeal Frank-Dodd, the so-called financial reform legislation.

Frank-Dodd doesn’t actually accomplish anything but add an extra level of regulation that’s killing the loan business by distorting business decisions.

For example, Dodd-Frank asks the too-big-to-fail institutions (called SIFIs) to come up with extra capital to insure against failure. That’s a reasonable expectation.

But some of these institutions are rather loosely defined. It should come as no surprise that those falling in the loosely defined category of SIFI are lobbying to be waived out of the extra capital requirements.

And some will be waived out.

Those that can’t get waived will change their business model to avoid the extra burdens that comes with being an SIFI.

In the meantime, they are holding on to cash as a prudent business decision.

That’s the problem with these types of federal laws. It leads to business decisions made for the sake of complying with laws, not business realities.


For example, Hartford Financial Services Group Inc said today that it would sell a small bank it purchased to take advantage of bailout laws passed in response to the financial meltdown of 2008.

“Hartford said it will record a second-quarter charge of about $70 million after taxes on its agreement to sell the bank, Federal Trust Corp., to CenterState Banks Inc.,” reports the Wall Street Journal. “Buying the lender allowed Hartford to get $3.4 billion from the federal bailout program; it repaid the bailout last year.”

What was the purchase price for $3.4 billion in government loans? $10 million.

Clearly Hartford took advantage of a law to help their shareholders. That’s what businesses do. The moment we ask them to stop doing that, the economy will collapse completely. 

Right now, banks, especially small banks- the one that make loans on Main Street- are in regulatory limbo. The American Bankers Association estimates that over 1,000 small banks will close as a result of Dodd-Frank.

Instead of forcing those banks with perfectly sound balance sheets to close, we should be figuring out how to get them to loan money again.

That’s social engineering we can all agree on.

That's really our only hope.


We're out of money. And every minute, the money that you and I have is worth a little -or a lot- less.

This is what stagflation looks like. 

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Nearly Half of Americans Are ‘Financially Fragile’
Wall Street Journal Blogs ^ | May 25, 2011 | Phil Izzo


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Nearly half of Americans say that they definitely or probably couldn’t come up with $2,000 in 30 days, according to new research, raising concerns about the financial fragility of many households.

In a paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Annamaria Lusardi of the George Washington School of Business, Daniel J. Schneider of Princeton University and Peter Tufano of Harvard Business School used data from the 2009 TNS Global Economic Crisis survey to document widespread financial weakness in the U.S. and other countries.

The survey asked a simple question, “If you were to face a $2,000 unexpected expense in the next month, how would you get the funds you need?” In the U.S., 24.9% of respondents reported being certainly able, 25.1% probably able, 22.2% probably unable and 27.9% certainly unable. The $2,000 figure “reflects the order of magnitude of the cost of an unanticipated major car repair, a large copayment on a medical expense, legal expenses, or a home repair,” the authors write. On a more concrete basis, the authors cite $2,000 as the cost of an auto transmission replacement and research that reported low-income families claim to need about $1500 in savings for emergencies.

Financial fragility isn’t limited to low-income groups. “Households with socioeconomic markers of vulnerability (income, wealth, wealth losses, education, women, families with children) are more likely to be financially fragile, and substantially more so,” the authors write. “The more surprising finding is that a material fraction of seemingly ‘middle class’ Americans also judge themselves to be financially fragile, reflecting either a substantially weaker financial position than one would expect, or a very high level of anxiety or pessimism. Both are important in terms of behavior and for public policy.”


(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.wsj.com ...


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Wow.   



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Shadow Stat Misery Index Highest on Record
www.EconomicPolicyJourna l.com ^ | May 13, 2011




John Williams, over at Shadow Stats, compiles economic data for inflation and unemployment the way it used to be calculated pre-1990. Based on that data, the CPI inflation rate is over 10%, and the unemployment rate is over 15% (see charts). The Misery Index is the sum of the current inflation rate and the unemployment rate. If it were to be calculated using the older methods, the Index would now be over 25, a record high. It surpasses the old index high of 21.98, which occurred in June 1980, when Jimmy Carter was president. Most believe the height of the Index along with the Iranian hostage crisis is what caused Carter to lose his re-election bid.

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BIG miss on Durable Goods Orders today as well...

Plus there were more downward future GDP revisions.

Not good.

Bindare_Dundat

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BIG miss on Durable Goods Orders today as well...

Plus there were more downward future GDP revisions.

Not good.

 Grab yer surfboard dude, the next crisis wave is building up.

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Grab yer surfboard dude, the next crisis wave is building up.

The only wave here, bro, is the giant wave of recovery!

Surfs Up!

Soul Crusher

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Yeah recovery summer alright.

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How fucking dare you guys insult this "recovery". In-fact, it could have been even better if Obama had done like Straw Man advocates and spent MORE on the stimulus!

Soul Crusher

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Things have goTten so bad in my nabe my car got broken in to and they stole my gym bag w dirty underwear, swim goggles anf fins, and deodarant in it.  All in broad daylight.  Cop at the scene said crime is spiking again in nyc bouroughs. 

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Stubborn Jobless Claims Still Keep On Climbing Higher
Published: Thursday, 26 May 2011 | 8:36 AM ET Text Size By: Reuters



New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly climbed to 424,000 last week from a revised 414,000 in the prior week, pointing to a painfully slow improvement in the nation's job markets.
 

The Labor Department on Thursday revised the prior week's claims number up from an originally reported 409,000.


Economists surveyed by Reuters had forecast that claims last week would decline to 400,000, rather than rise.

The four-week moving average of unemployment claims, considered a better measure of trends since it smoothes out weekly variations, eased slightly to 438,500 from a revised 440,250.

Last week marked the seventh straight week in which claims topped the 400,000 level, indicating that payroll growth is soft and may continue to be so for some time. A department official said there were no exceptional factors to account for the rise in last week's claims.


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HOPE & CHANGE BITCHES WHILE PADDY O'BAMA DRINKS IT UP