Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

How to Get Beyond Private Equity’s Parasite Economy

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How to Get Beyond Private Equity’s Parasite Economy

Monday, March 24, 2014

Our Entire Economy is One Big Lie

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Our Entire Economy is One Big Lie

Monday, March 17, 2014

Minimum wage, rough economy hurting teen employment

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Minimum wage, rough economy hurting teen employment

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Crimea’s economy in numbers and pictures

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Crimea’s economy in numbers and pictures

Monday, March 10, 2014

Shareable"s 15 Ways to Thrive in a New Economy

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Shareable"s 15 Ways to Thrive in a New Economy

Saturday, March 8, 2014

The Top 12 Signs That The U.S. Economy Is Heading Toward Another Recession

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The Top 12 Signs That The U.S. Economy Is Heading Toward Another Recession

Thursday, March 6, 2014

VIDEO: Five Years of the Bull Market: Economist"s Take









Five years ago this weekend, March 9, the U.S. stock market hit its crisis bottom. Since then the S 500 has more than doubled, but the economy still remains a sputtering engine. Lindsey Piegza, chief economist at Sterne Agee, discusses on MoneyBeat.













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VIDEO: Five Years of the Bull Market: Economist"s Take

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

China Says U.S. Economy Is Fake And Nothing Backs The Dollar -- Episode 301

China Says U.S. Economy Is Fake And Nothing Backs The Dollar -- Episode 301
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Obama 2015 budget focuses on boosting economy








President Barack Obama sits with Emily Hare as she completes her spelling lessons during his visit to a preschool classroom at Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Obama visited the school to talk about his 2015 budget proposal, which was released today. Powell elementary has seen rapid growth in recent years and serves a predominantly Hispanic student body. Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray, who greeted Obama at the school, recently directed $ 20 million to Powell for a planned modernization and addition. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





President Barack Obama sits with Emily Hare as she completes her spelling lessons during his visit to a preschool classroom at Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. Obama visited the school to talk about his 2015 budget proposal, which was released today. Powell elementary has seen rapid growth in recent years and serves a predominantly Hispanic student body. Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray, who greeted Obama at the school, recently directed $ 20 million to Powell for a planned modernization and addition. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





President Barack Obama answers a question regarding the ongoing situation in the Ukraine during his visit to Powell Elementary School in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014, where he went to discuss his fiscal 2015 federal budget proposels. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)





Copies of President Barack Obama’s proposed fiscal 2015 budget are set out for distribution by Senate Budget Committee Clerk Adam Kamp, center, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2014. President Barack Obama is unwrapping a nearly $ 4 trillion budget that gives Democrats an election-year playbook for fortifying the economy and bolstering Americans’ incomes. It also underscores how pressure has faded to launch bold, new attacks on federal deficits. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





FILE – In this Feb. 28, 2014 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. Striving for unity among Democrats rather than compromise with Republicans, President Barack Obama unveils an election-year budget on Tuesday that drops cuts to Social Security and seeks new money for infrastructure, education and job training. Congress will likely approve a smaller amount based on last year’s budget deal. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)





FILE – In this Feb. 5, 2014 file photo, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. listens on Capitol Hill in Washington. Striving for unity among Democrats rather than compromise with Republicans, President Barack Obama unveils an election-year budget on Tuesday that drops cuts to Social Security and seeks new money for infrastructure, education and job training. Congress will likely approve a smaller amount based on last year’s budget deal. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama sent Congress a $ 3.9 trillion budget Tuesday that would funnel money into road building, education and other economy-bolstering programs, handing Democrats a playbook for their election-year themes of creating jobs and narrowing the income gap between rich and poor.


The blueprint for fiscal 2015, which begins Oct. 1, is laden with populist proposals designed to fortify those goals. It includes new spending for pre-school education and job training, expanded tax credits for 13.5 million low-income workers without children and more than $ 1 trillion in higher taxes over the next decade, mostly for the wealthiest Americans and corporations.


“As a country, we’ve got to make a decision if we’re going to protect tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans or if we’re going to make smart investments necessary to create jobs and grow our economy and expand opportunity for every American,” Obama told students at an elementary school in the nation’s capital.


With an eye in part on job creation, $ 302 billion would be spent to upgrade roads, railroads and mass transit, with more money aimed at improvements at Veterans Affairs hospitals and national parks. Additional funds would be aimed at clean energy research, creating 45 public-private manufacturing institutes for spurring innovation and training workers whose companies have closed or moved.


To help pay for those initiatives and others and trim federal deficits as well, Obama relies in part on higher revenue.


He would raise $ 651 billion by limiting tax deductions for the nation’s highest earners and with a “Buffett tax” — named for billionaire Warren Buffett — slapping minimum levies on the highest-earning people. Taxes would also be raised on large estates, financial institutions, tobacco products, airline passengers and managers of private investment funds.


Congress has ignored those revenue proposals and many of Obama’s spending ideas before. With the entire House and one-third of the Senate facing re-election in November, campaign-year pressures and gridlock between the Democratic-led Senate and Republican dominated House all but ensure that few of the president’s initiatives will go far.


“The president has offered perhaps his most irresponsible budget yet,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who has participated in two failed rounds of deficit-reduction talks with Obama since 2011. “American families looking for jobs and opportunity will find only more government in this plan.”


“It’s disappointing that the president produced a campaign document instead of putting forth a serious budget blueprint that makes the tough choices necessary to get our fiscal house in order,” said Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee.


Obama’s budget claims to obey overall agency spending limits that were enacted in December after a bipartisan compromise was reached between Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the heads of the House and Senate budget committees.


Yet Obama was proposing an additional package of $ 55 billion in spending priorities, half for defense and half for domestic programs.


Without that extra money, Pentagon spending be $ 496 billion, the same as this year. The Pentagon plans to shrink the Army from 490,000 active-duty soldiers to as few as 440,000 over the coming five years — the smallest since just before World War II.


The extra funds would allow steps like buying additional aircraft and enhancing training.


Budget cutters have had the upper hand over defense hawks in recent years. But this year’s debate over military spending will have an added element as Obama encounters Republican demands for a tough U.S. stance following Russia’s intervention in Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula.


On the domestic side, Obama would use the additional money for grants to states for preschools, new research financed by the National Institutes of Health and modernization of aviation safety systems.


That extra spending would be paid for by cutting federal crop insurance, raising airline passenger fees and capping retirement account tax benefits for wealthy savers — all of which would face an uphill climb in Congress.


The White House released fewer budget documents than normal on Tuesday, making it hard to determine exact costs and details of some of those additional spending proposals and others, such as the 2015 price tag for Obama’s health care overhaul.


However, Obama’s plan to expand the earned income tax credit to childless, low-income workers would cost $ 116 billion over 10 years. It would increase the current $ 500 maximum those recipients can receive to $ 1,000.


The budget projects a 2015 deficit of $ 564 billion and a shortfall this year of $ 649 billion. If those come true, it would mark three straight years of annual red ink under $ 1 trillion, following four previous years when deficits exceeded that mark every time.


The president’s spending plan also takes credit for reducing potential accumulated deficits over coming decade by $ 2.2 trillion, though the red ink would grow by $ 4.9 trillion over that period. The nation still faces long-term deficit problems as baby boomers retire and government health care costs continue to grow.


Nearly one-third of Obama’s savings come from claimed savings from the end of the U.S. war in Iraq and the gradual withdrawal of forces from Afghanistan. Critics argue that those savings are fictional because with the ending of U.S. involvement in those conflicts, no one had been expecting that money to be spent on combat.


Other savings the president claims include $ 158 billion from his proposal to revamp immigration laws, which has stalled in Congress. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has made a similar estimate, with federal revenue accruing as more immigrants work and pay taxes.


The budget also retains Obama’s 2012 proposal to reshape corporate income taxes, including lowering the top rate from 28 percent to 25 percent. It says the overhaul would raise a one-time $ 150 billion with steps like smaller loopholes for U.S. companies doing business overseas — about half of which Obama would use to finance transportation improvements.


That resembles a proposal by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., in a rare instance of overlap on revenues by the two parties. But prospects for a tax overhaul remain dim in an election year.


Much of the rest of Obama’s deficit reduction would come from other proposals with little chance of surviving in Congress, including higher taxes and Medicare costs for the rich and cuts in government payments to pharmaceutical companies and other Medicare providers. With declining budget deficits, it has become easier for lawmakers to avoid seriously considering the politically painful tax increases and spending cuts needed to significantly reduce the shortfalls.


Thus, the president’s budget does not renew last year’s offer — hated by many fellow Democrats — to save money by slowing increases of Social Security benefits. The White House says that plan was advanced only to entice congressional Republicans into deficit-reduction talks and was excluded this year after GOP leaders refused to reciprocate by offering tax increases.


Obama’s budget starts what should be a relatively peaceful year on Washington’s fiscal front lines. That is because land mines embedded in the budgetary landscape have been defused this time around after cliffhanger, partisan showdowns in recent years.


Instead of the annual fight over spending limits — which last year helped produce a 16-day partial government shutdown — Murray and Ryan’s bipartisan compromise set an overall agency spending cap for the next two years. That has eliminated the need for lawmakers to do anything but provide the details in later spending bills, easing the threat of another federal closure.


Also missing this year is a need to extend the government’s debt limit, which in the past has sparked battles that threatened economy-jarring federal defaults. Congress has given the Treasury Department authority to borrow money into next March, eliminating a must-pass legislative vehicle that either side might use to make demands.


___


Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Nedra Pickler and Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Obama 2015 budget focuses on boosting economy

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Brazil economy ends 2013 on an upbeat note, boosting Rousseff




SAO PAULO Thu Feb 27, 2014 10:07am EST



Brazil

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff speaks at a joint news conference with European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso (unseen) during an EU-Brazil summit in Brussels February 24, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Francois Lenoir




SAO PAULO (Reuters) – Brazil’s economy ended 2013 on a positive note thanks to strong consumer spending and investment, providing a much-needed boost to President Dilma Rousseff as she tries to rebuild her credibility with investors and win reelection in October.


Gross domestic product expanded 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter, the government statistics institute said on Thursday. That was more than twice the amount expected by economists, and it pushed the economy to 2.3 percent growth on an annual basis for the full year of 2013.


Such growth is a far cry from the dynamic 4 to 5 percent annual levels often seen last decade, when Chinese demand for commodities helped make Brazil a star among emerging markets. Poor infrastructure, high consumer debt and sagging business confidence have brought Latin America’s biggest economy back to earth since then, prompting fears of a long period of stagnant growth ahead, possibly for years to come.


But Brazil’s 2013 GDP growth was still more than twice as fast as Mexico, which has in recent years surpassed it as an investor favorite in the region.


Meanwhile, a 6.3 percent jump in investment last year should over time help ease some of the bottlenecks holding the economy back. It will also give Rousseff a major calling card with business leaders as she tries to atone for policy errors early in her left-leaning presidency and convince them her second term will be more market-friendly.


“It’s a good result, since there was more investment, and you could see a reduction in the mismatch between supply and demand. It suggests the economy is growing with a better makeup than it was before,” said Jankiel Santos, chief economist at Espirito Santo investment bank in Sao Paulo.


Santos and other economists cautioned against getting carried away by optimism, though. Retail sales and industrial data suggest 2014 will be a tougher year, with several challenges including a severe drought and problems in neighboring Argentina dragging on activity.


Indeed, the data published on Thursday contained plenty of grist for both bulls and bears.


On the positive side, household spending expanded 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter, while government spending grew 0.8 percent. For the full year, agriculture grew 7 percent compared to 2012, thanks to record sugar cane, soy and corn harvests.


However, industry shrank 0.2 percent in the fourth quarter, dragged down by a 0.9 percent fall in manufacturing. Brazil’s factories have been struggling for years with high labor costs, bad infrastructure and low productivity.


PROBLEMS WITH INFLATION


Brazil’s economy had been expected to grow just 0.3 percent in the fourth quarter, according to the median forecast of 43 analysts polled by Reuters.


The quarterly result represented a strong rebound after the economy had contracted 0.5 percent in the third quarter. Many economists believed that growth could have been negative again in the fourth quarter, which would have meant a recession.


The rise in government spending was also a mixed blessing. While it helped boost the economy, loose fiscal policy has also pushed up inflation and raised the threat of a credit downgrade by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s.


Elevated inflation has dented business and consumer confidence, prompting the central bank to raise interest rates off record lows to 10.75 percent in a non-stop cycle since April last year. It also eroded purchasing power, leading to the worst year for retail sales in a decade.


The economy grew 1.9 percent in the fourth quarter compared to a year earlier, IBGE said. That surpassed expectations by analysts polled by Reuters for growth of 1.6 percent.


(Additional reporting by Silvio Cascione and Bruno Federowski; Editing by Todd Benson and Sofina Mirza-Reid)





Reuters: Top News



Brazil economy ends 2013 on an upbeat note, boosting Rousseff

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Robert Reich: WhatsApp Is Everything Wrong with the U.S. Economy



The instant messaging service connects millions, but its record-breaking sale won"t generate new jobs.








This originally appeared on Robert Reich"s blog.

 

If you ever wonder what’s fueling America’s staggering inequality, ponder Facebook’s acquisition of the mobile messaging company WhatsApp.


According to news reports today, Facebook has agreed to buy WhatsApp for $ 19 billion.


That’s the highest price paid for a start-up in history. It’s $ 3 billion more than Facebook raised when it was first listed, and more than twice what Microsoft paid for Skype.


(To be precise, $ 12 billion of the $ 19 billion will be in the form of shares in Facebook, $ 4 billion will be in cash, and $ 3 billion in restricted stock to WhatsApp staff, which will vest in four years.)


Given that gargantuan amount, you might think WhatsApp is a big company. You’d be wrong. It has 55 employees, including its two young founders, Jan Koum and Brian Acton.


WhatsApp’s value doesn’t come from making anything. It doesn’t need a large organization to distribute its services or implement its strategy.


It value comes instead from two other things that require only a handful of people. First is its technology — a simple but powerful app that allows users to send and receive text, image, audio and video messages through the Internet.


The second is its network effect: The more people use it, the more other people want and need to use it in order to be connected. To that extent, it’s like Facebook — driven by connectivity.


WhatsApp’s worldwide usage has more than doubled in the past nine months, to 450 million people — and it’s growing by around a million users every day. On December 31, 2013, it handled 54 billion messages (making its service more popular than Twitter, now valued at about $ 30 billion.)


How does it make money? The first year of usage is free. After that, customers pay a small fee. At the scale it’s already achieved, even a small fee generates big bucks. And if it gets into advertising it could reach more eyeballs than any other medium in history. It already has a database that could be mined in ways that reveal huge amounts of information about a significant percentage of the world’s population.


The winners here are truly big winners. WhatsApp’s fifty-five employees are now enormously rich. Its two founders are now billionaires. And the partners of the venture capital firm that financed it have also reaped a fortune.


And the rest of us? We’re winners in the sense that we have an even more efficient way to connect with each other.


But we’re not getting more jobs.


In the emerging economy, there’s no longer any correlation between the size of a customer base and the number of employees necessary to serve them. In fact, the combination of digital technologies with huge network effects is pushing the ratio of employees to customers to new lows (WhatsApp’s 55 employees are all its 450 million customers need).


Meanwhile, the ranks of postal workers, call-center operators, telephone installers, the people who lay and service miles of cable, and the millions of other communication workers, are dwindling — just as retail workers are succumbing to Amazon, office clerks and secretaries to Microsoft, and librarians and encyclopedia editors to Google.


Productivity keeps growing, as do corporate profits. But jobs and wages are not growing. Unless we figure out how to bring all of them back into line – or spread the gains more widely – our economy cannot generate enough demand to sustain itself, and our society cannot maintain enough cohesion to keep us together.


 

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Robert Reich: WhatsApp Is Everything Wrong with the U.S. Economy

Thursday, February 20, 2014

VIDEO: Weekly Jobless Claims Fell in Line With Expectations









Initial claims for jobless claims benefits, a measure of layoffs, decreased by 3,000 to a seasonally adjusted 336,000 in the week ended Feb. 15. Barron’s Brendan Conway discusses what the numbers mean on the News Hub. Photo: AP.













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VIDEO: Weekly Jobless Claims Fell in Line With Expectations

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Lord Turner: UK economy is like 90s Japan


James Quinn
telegraph.co.uk
February 10, 2014


Lord Turner has warned that the UK has failed to rebalance its economy and is simply repeating the errors made in the run-up to the 2007/8 financial crisis.


The self-styled technocrat, who was chairman of the City regulator until last April, likened the domestic economy over the last five years to Japan in the 1990s.


The former Financial Services Authority chief – who made it on to the shortlist to replace Lord King as Governor of the Bank of England – said that although the economy was now showing obvious signs of growth, there was the potential that it will not be sustained due to the continued build up of credit in the system.


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This article was posted: Monday, February 10, 2014 at 2:00 pm









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Lord Turner: UK economy is like 90s Japan

Monday, February 10, 2014

Young People Still Getting Hosed by Unemployment in Obama"s Economy, Losing Prime Earning Years


Townhall.com:

For two months in a row, and quite frankly for the past five years, the unemployment report from the Department of Labor has been nothing short of pathetic. Although the unemployment rate is falling, giving the false perception that less people are out of work, millions have stopped looking for work and have dropped out of the labor force. But there’s one subsection of the unemployment picture that doesn’t get discussed enough: the young unemployed can’t find jobs and haven’t been able to for years. 

The teenage unemployment rate sits at 21 percent, which is more than three times the national unemployment rate of 6.6 percent. CNSNews breaks down the numbers:

The teen unemployment rate went up in January to 20.7% — from 20.2% in December– and is now more than three times the national unemployment rate of 6.6%, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

Then of course there’s the millennial generation. According to Generation Opportunity, the unemployment rate for 19-31-year-olds is 15.8 percent.

The declining labor force participation rate has created an additional 1.922 million young adults that are not counted as “unemployed” by the U.S. Department of Labor because they are not in the labor force, meaning that those young people have given up looking for work due to the lack of jobs. 


The effective (U-6) unemployment rate for 18-29 year olds, which adjusts for labor force participation by including those who have given up looking for work, is 15.8 percent (NSA). The (U-3) unemployment rate for 18-29 year olds is 11.3 percent (NSA).

In addition, a new report shows nearly one in four 26-year-olds are living at home with mom and dad.

A ten-year survey of millennials reveals that almost one in four (22.6%) 26-year-olds are still living with their parents. 


The U.S. Department of Education report confirmed that, if you are tired of living with Mom and Dad, then do your homework and stay in school.


According to the survey titled “Where Are They Now,” education makes a difference: generally those with more schooling were less likely to be living at home. The study shed some light on how older millennials have been faring during the Great Recession. 


According to a Pew Research analysis of the 2012 data, lower levels of employment, an increase in college enrollment, and a decrease in young people getting married are major factors in the increase of millennials living at home.

By the time Barack Obama leaves office, millennials will have spent nearly a decade and prime working years, jobless. Considering 2/3 of lifetime wage growth occurs in a person’s 20s, the young unemployment trend is alarming.

Dr. Meg Jay, author of a new book called The Defining Decade, says that a significant portion of your lifetime earning potential happens in your 20s, making it critical to get out there and get working. She estimates that as much as two-thirds of lifetime wage growth happens during just the first 10 years of a career. Once you hit your 40s, salaries will peak or plateau, making it hard or impossible to catch up if you only start getting serious about your career in your 30s.


RELATED: January jobs report: 113,000 jobs added, 6.6% unemployment rate
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Young People Still Getting Hosed by Unemployment in Obama"s Economy, Losing Prime Earning Years

Monday, February 3, 2014

Spain"s "black" economy worth 25 percent of GDP


The black economy was worth €253 billion ($ 344 billion) in 2012, the report by Spanish tax office workers union Gestha shows.


That’s €60 billion higher than at the start of the crisis in 2008, and means the submerged economy was worth a whopping 24.6 percent of GDP in 2012.


In 2008, by contrast, this underground activity was valued at a still-high 17.8 percent of GDP.


The Gestha report ties the massive growth in Spain’s submerged economy to high levels of corruption, the lingering effects of the country’s building boom — which created a huge pool of black money — and massive unemployment.




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Spain"s "black" economy worth 25 percent of GDP

VIDEO: Asian Markets in Second Week of Declines







Asian markets enter a second week of volatility, this time on news that U.S. manufacturing slowed in January. The WSJ’s Jake Lee tells us why things may not settle down anytime soon.













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VIDEO: Asian Markets in Second Week of Declines

Sunday, January 26, 2014

CNN spins Obama’s failures on the economy .. again

CNN.com’s Annalyn Kurtz starts out her article with a strong headline that plants the blame for a floundering economy squarely where it belongs, but then arranges factors and symptoms in an odd order to soften the blow.


The emboldened headlining paragraph reads:


Five years into his presidency, Barack Obama is still falling short of his number one goal: to fix the economy for the middle class.



Ok, first, why fix it just for the middle class? Shouldn’t we just want the economy to work so that everyone has an opportunity to make out of it what they can?


The article is titled “7 Setbacks for the middle class”, but actually there’s just one that’s the cause and the others are all effects stemming from the primary failure – the economy isn’t producing jobs.


Annalyn lays out the 7 setbacks as thus:


  1. Workers are taking home their smallest slice of U.S. income on record

  2. Inequality has widened

  3. The job market still faces a gaping hole

  4. The poverty rate remains high

  5. Record number of Americans are on food stamps

  6. The manufacturing revival was a mirage

  7. Global trade isn’t helping much

The first two “setbacks” appear as though income inequality is a major factor in causing the economic hardships Americans have been facing under President Obama. Most informed Americans would have perhaps made a list looking more like this:


Prime Issue: The job market still faces a gaping hole


Effects of the Prime Issue:


  1. Workers are taking home their smallest slice of U.S. income on record

  2. Inequality has widened

  3. The poverty rate remains high

  4. Record number of Americans are on food stamps

Obama’s cash for clunkers, stimulus, stimulus two, extension of unemployment benefits, easing of welfare regulations and numerous other initiatives have done nothing to spur businesses into hiring – government programs rarely do. Add on Obamacare and the costs to business and consumers – there isn’t as much money left to spend in the economy so that retailers, manufacturers and service industry companies have the ability to hire.


With the, often last-minute, executive proclamation changes to regulations, any business that would think of growing is instead saving for a rainy day – it might just come tomorrow at the stroke of Obama’s pen.


Government intervention is holding back the recovery. Obamacare alone may stall it and the breakdown of the effects demonstrates the true relationship:


Workers taking home smallest slice of U.S. income on record:


Duh! With the labor participation rate at its lowest since Jimmy Carter, disability and food stamps at record levels – of course those living off the government aren’t getting a cut of the profits. That’s the difference between a paycheck and a handout.


Inequality has widened


Ok, what part of this “setback” doesn’t feel like a repetition of the last one? Yes, if fewer people are working, fewer people will be making as much money. Government handouts do not offer opportunity – just enslavement. The last five years have been a steady proof of that.


The poverty rate remains high


Of course is does. Not to sound like a broken record player but.. if you aren’t working, it is very hard to not be poor. No one gets rich on disability, welfare and food stamps.


Record number of Americans on food stamps


No way not to repeat myself here, so I won’t


You see, it comes down to a President and Congress who have no idea how to get out of the way and allow the economy to recover.


Economic Inequality is the mantra of the left and where it appears Annalyn was trying to take the reader, albeit unconvincingly. Measures such as raising the minimum wage, extending unemployment benefits to almost two years, relaxing welfare requirements are all doomed to failure and they are likely going to be the themes upon which many re-election campaigns are rested.



Rich Mitchell is the Sr. Managing Editor of Conservative Daily News. His posts may contain opinions that are his own and are not necessarily shared by Anomalous Media, CDN, staff or .. much of anyone else. Find him on twitter, facebook and google+


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CNN spins Obama’s failures on the economy .. again

Thursday, January 23, 2014

VIDEO: Adam Posen: Austerity Was Bad for Britain







President of the Peterson Institute Adam Posen says Britain’s austerity wasn’t good for its economy and wouldn’t be good in the U.S. He tells WSJ’s Simon Constable at the World Economic Forum there is a bright future ahead for the U.S. economy. Photo: Getty Images













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VIDEO: Adam Posen: Austerity Was Bad for Britain

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?

Piggybank-Photo-by-Damian-OSullivan-300x199Is the U.S. consumer tapped out?  If so, how in the world will the U.S. economy possibly improve in 2014?  Most Americans know that the U.S. economy is heavily dependent on consumer spending.  If average Americans are not out there spending money, the economy tends not to do very well.  Unfortunately, retail sales during the holiday season appear to be quite disappointing and the middle class continues to deeply struggle.  And for a whole bunch of reasons things are likely going to be even tougher in 2014.  Families are going to have less money in their pockets to spend thanks to much higher health insurance premiums under Obamacare, a wide variety of tax increases, higher interest rates on debt, and cuts in government welfare programs.  The short-lived bubble of false prosperity that we have been enjoying for the last couple of years is rapidly coming to an end, and 2014 certainly promises to be a very “interesting year”.


Obamacare Rate Shock


Most middle class families are just scraping by from month to month these days.


Unfortunately for them, millions of those families are now being hit with massive health insurance rate increases.


In a previous article, I discussed how one study found that health insurance premiums for men are going to go up by an average of 99 percent under Obamacare and health insurance premiums for women are going to go up by an average of 62 percent under Obamacare.


Most middle class families simply cannot afford that.


Earlier today, I got an email from a reader that was paying $ 478 a month for health insurance for his family but has now received a letter informing him that his rate is going up to $ 1,150 a month.


Millions of families are receiving letters just like that.  And to say that these rate increases are a “surprise” to most people would be a massive understatement.  Even people that work in the financial industry are shocked at how high these premiums are turning out to be…


“The real big surprise was how much out-of-pocket would be required for our family,” said David Winebrenner, 46, a financial adviser in Lebanon, Ky., whose deductible topped $ 12,000 for a family of six for a silver plan he was considering. The monthly premium: $ 1,400.



Since Americans are going to have to pay much more for health insurance, that is going to remove a huge amount of discretionary spending from the economy, and that will not be good news for retailers.


Get Ready For Higher Taxes


When you raise taxes, you reduce the amount of money that people have in their pockets to spend.


Sadly, that is exactly what is happening.


Congress is allowing a whopping 55 tax breaks to expire at the end of this year, and when you add that to the 13 major tax increases that hit American families in 2013, it isn’t a pretty picture.


This tax season, millions of families are going to find out that they have much higher tax bills than they had anticipated.


And all of this comes at a time when incomes in America have beensteadily declining.  In fact, real median household income has declined by a total of 8 percent since 2008.


If you are a worker, you might want to check out the chart that I have posted below to see where you stack up.  In America today, most workers are low income workers.  These numbers come from a recentHuffington Post article


-If you make more than $ 10,000, you earn more than 24.2% of Americans, or 37 million people.


-If you make more than $ 15,000 (roughly the annual salary of a minimum-wage employee working 40 hours per week), you earn more than 32.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 30,000, you earn more than 53.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 50,000, you earn more than 73.4% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 100,000, you earn more than 92.6% of Americans.


-You are officially in the top 1% of American wage earners if you earn more than $ 250,000.


-The 894 people that earn more than $ 20 millionmake more than 99.99989% of Americans, and are compensated a cumulative $ 37,009,979,568 per year.



It is important to keep in mind that those numbers are for the employment income of individuals not households.  Most households have more than one member working, so overall household incomes are significantly higher than these numbers.


Higher Interest Rates Mean Larger Debt Payments


On Tuesday, the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries rose to 3.03 percent.  I warned that this would happen once the taper started, and this is just the beginning.  Interest rates are likely to steadily rise throughout 2014.


The reason why the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries is such a critical number is because mortgage rates and thousands of other interest rates throughout our economy are heavily influenced by that number.


So big changes are on the way.  As a recent CNBC article declared, the era of low mortgage rates is officially over…


The days of the 3.5% 30-year fixed are over. Rates are already up well over a full percentage point from a year ago, and as the Federal Reserve begins its much anticipated exit from the bond-buying business, I believe rates will inevitably go higher.



Needless to say, this is going to deeply affect the real estate market.  AsMac Slavo recently noted, numbers are already starting to drop precipitously…


The National Association of Realtors reported that the month of September saw its single largest drop in signed home sales in 40 months. And that wasn’t just a one-off event. This month mortgage applications collapsed a shocking 66%, hitting a13-year low.



And U.S. consumers can expect interest rates on all kinds of loans to start rising.  That is going to mean higher debt payments, and therefore less money for consumers to spend into the economy.


Government Benefit Cuts


Well, if the middle class is going to have less money to spend, perhaps other Americans can pick up the slack.


Or maybe not.


You certainly can’t expect the poor to stimulate the economy.  As I mentioned yesterday, it is being projected that up to 5 million unemployed Americans could lose their unemployment benefits by the end of 2014, and 47 million Americans recently had their food stamp benefits reduced.


So the poor will also have less money to spend in 2014.


The Wealthy Save The Day?


Perhaps the stock market will continue to soar in 2014 and the wealthy will spend so much that it will make up for all the rest of us.


You can believe that if you want, but the truth is that there are a whole host of signs that the days of this irrational stock market bubble are numbered.  The following is an excerpt from one of my recent articles entitled “The Stock Market Has Officially Entered Crazytown Territory“…


The median price-to-earnings ratio on the S&P 500 has reached an all-time record high, and margin debt at the New York Stock Exchange has reached a level that we have never seen before.  In other words, stocks are massively overpriced and people have been borrowing huge amounts of money to buy stocks.  These are behaviors that we also saw just before the last two stock market bubbles burst.



If the stock market bubble does burst, the wealthy will also have less money to spend into the economy in 2014.


For the moment, the stock market has been rallying.  This is typical for the month of December.  You see, the truth is that investors generally don’t want to sell stocks in December because they want to put off paying taxes on the profits.


If stocks are sold before the end of the year, the profits go on the 2013 tax return.


If stocks are sold a few days from now, the profits go on the 2014 tax return.


It is only human nature to want to delay pain for as long as possible.


Expect to see some selling in January.  Many investors are very eager to start taking profits, but they wanted to wait until the holidays were over to do so.


So what do you think is coming up in 2014?  Please feel free to share what you think by posting a comment below…


Michael T. Snyder is a graduate of the University of Florida law school and he worked as an attorney in the heart of Washington D.C. for a number of years. Today, Michael is best known for his work as the publisher of The Economic Collapse Blog and The American Dream. If you want to know what things in America are going to look like in a few years read his new book The Beginning of the End.



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How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?