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Threats To the Economy Averted

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Good news for the economy!  Deflation is unlikely and jobless claims are shrinking.  Two significant threats to the economy are receding, although the recovery still has a long way to go. One of the threats was the specter of deflation – which has not occurred since the 1930s – now belied by the 0.3 percent inflation rate reported for August, and driven primarily by rising food and energy prices, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The second is that another round of mass layoffs looks unlikely now, given the third drop in jobless claims in four weeks.

First-time applications for unemployment benefits fell by 3,000 to a seasonally adjusted 450,000 recently, the lowest level in two months, according to the Department of Labor.  In Illinois, for example, the unemployment rate fell to 10.1 percent in August, the eighth straight month that the rate was steady or declined.

Chris Rupkey, an economist with Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, described August’s spike in unemployment claims a “false alarm.  The labor markets are stable and companies are not increasing layoffs.”  David Resler, chief U.S. economist at Nomura Securities agrees, noting that the August spike likely resulted from temporary census jobs that came to an end.

March Numbers Are Looking Good: Conference Board

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Leading economic indicators rose 1.4 percent in March.March brought some long-awaited upbeat economic news, with the index of leading economic indicators rising 1.4 percent.  According to MarketWatch, the milestone represents 12 consecutive monthly gains and outperformed February’s 0.4 percent increase. Ken Goldstein, a Conference Board economist, said that “Improvement in employment and income will be the key factors in whether consumers push the recovery on a stronger path.”

Although seven of the 10 leading indicators were positive in March, Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist with High Frequency Economics, is not particularly optimistic.  “We look for a much smaller increase in the index in April,” he said.  “The index, in our view, fails to reflect the ongoing disaster in the small business sector, so it is very likely overstating growth substantially.  Taken at face value over recent months, it suggests the economy is booming.  It isn’t, and it isn’t about to start, either.”

The month’s most positive contributions came from interest rate spreads and average weekly manufacturing hours.  Negative impacts were the real money supply and manufacturers’ new orders for capital goods not related to the defense industry.  The coincident index – a measure of the economy as it is at a given time – climbed 0.1 percent in March.  The National Bureau of Economic Research uses these indicators to determine if the economy is in a recession.

The Department of Labor reported that the U.S. economy created 162,000 jobs in March, with the largest positive contribution coming from non-farm employment.  This is the largest seasonally adjusted increase in three years.  Temporary U.S. Census hiring and a recovery from bad winter weather boosted the employment numbers.  “Payrolls employment made its first substantial contribution to the coincident economic index, suggesting a recovery that is beginning to gain traction,” according to Ataman Ozyildirim, a Conference Board economist.

Geithner: Sustainable Economic Growth Has Started

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

March employment numbers indicate sustainable economic growth is underway.  The United States economy is entering an era of sustainable growth as companies begin hiring again.  That’s the opinion of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who said “I think the economy is definitely getting stronger. We’ve made a lot of progress, we’ve got some work to do still and it’s going to take some time to heal the damage.”

With the news that 162,000 jobs were created in March – the biggest uptick in three years – Geithner believes that the economic recovery is expanding.  The March numbers include 48,000 temporary workers hired by the government to work on the 2010 Census, as well as increases in manufacturing and healthcare.  Private payrolls climbed by 123,000 in March.  The Obama administration is emphasizing the change in the labor market because the economy shed 779,000 jobs in January of 2009, the month the president was inaugurated.

Christina Romer, head of the Obama administration’s Council of Economic Advisors, cautioned that while the report is “the most positive jobs report we have had in three years, there will likely be bumps in the road ahead.”  Alan Krueger, Geithner’s chief economist, sees private-sector hiring as a “healthy sign” that the economic recovery is gaining long-anticipated momentum.