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Is WV's Economic 'Comeback' Real?Ted Boettner and Dean Baker
Charleston Gazette-Mail, August 16, 2018
Dean Baker and / August 16, 2018
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Democracy and Capitalism: Rules for Peaceful CoexistenceDean Baker
Challenge, August 15, 2018
Dean Baker / August 15, 2018
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Social Security as a Share of Retirement IncomeAlan Barber and David Rosnick / August 14, 2018
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Anti-Union Measure in Missouri Loses by Massive MarginDean Baker
Truthout, August 13, 2018
Dean Baker / August 13, 2018
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The Cost of the Medicare Drug Benefit Has Actually Been Far Less Than ProjectedCEPR / August 13, 2018
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Scott Walker Boasts About the Sun Coming Up in the Washington PostCEPR / August 13, 2018
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NYT Says Partisanship Determines Thinking on Economy, but Its Chart Shows Partisanship Determines Republican Thinking on the EconomyCEPR / August 11, 2018
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Inflation, Excluding Food, Energy, and Shelter Prices, is at 2015 RatesKevin Cashman / August 10, 2018
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Rising Rents Continue to Drive Inflation: Core Excluding Shelter Up Just 1.5 Percent in Last YearAugust 10, 2018 (Prices Byte)
Dean Baker / August 10, 2018
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NYT Effort to Fill the Insatiable Market for Financial Crisis Stories: William D. Cohan EditionPrior to the collapse of the housing bubble and the resulting financial crisis there was little interest in major news outlets in pieces warning about the bubble and the risks it posed to the economy. These days there seems to be a large demand for such pieces. Unfortunately, in choosing these pieces, news outlets seem little better informed today than they were in the housing bubble years.
Today’s contribution comes from William D. Cohan and appears in the New York Times. The center of his story is corporate debt. The argument is that we have a large amount of debt that has been taken on at very low interest rates. If interest rates go up, then many debtors will be unable to pay their debts and we will be back in the 2008 financial crisis.
To get the ball rolling, Cohan pulls off one of the best bait and switches I have seen for a long time. He tells readers:
“The $30 trillion domestic stock market seems to get all the attention. When the stock market sets new highs, we instinctively feel things are good and getting better. When it tanks, as happened in the initial months of the 2008 financial crisis, we think things are going to hell.
“But the larger domestic debt market — at around $41 trillion for the bond market alone — reveals more about our nation’s financial health.”
This is a great bait and switch because he uses the $41 trillion figure for the bond market, but the rest of the piece is essentially devoted to corporate debt. Most of the $41 trillion in bonds either comes from the federal government ($17 trillion), Fannie and Freddie ($6.7 trillion), and state and local governments ($3.1 trillion). The portion that is attributable to non-financial corporations, which is the focus of the piece, comes to $6.2 trillion.
CEPR / August 09, 2018
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Secret Info for CEOs: Your Competitors Have Workers You Can HireCEPR / August 09, 2018
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NYT Falls Victim to Trump Derangement Syndrome in Warning of Clouds for the EconomyDonald Trump provides no shortage of grounds for criticism, but the NYT is really grasping at straws in it editorial headlined, "clouds darken Trump's sunny economic view." The confusion that characterizes the piece starts in the first paragraph when it tells us "the stock market seemed unimpressed" by the 157,000 jobs reported for July.
This is bizarre for two reasons. First, a major complaint of the piece is that workers are not getting their share of productivity gains, instead, it is going to profits. While this is true (although the revised data do show a substantial shift from profits to wages in the last three years), the story of stagnant wages and rising profits should lead to a higher stock market, other things equal.
If shareholders believe that Trump policies will shift income from wages to profits, this would be a reason for the market to rise. If we are supposed to be impressed by the market's decline then this could mean shareholders are worried about future profits. This is again a case where it is worth pointing out that the stock market is not the economy.
The other point is that monthly jobs data are erratic. It is common for bad months to be followed by good months and vice versa. This is why economists typically focus on job growth over several months, as opposed to a single month.
We created 268,000 jobs in May and 248,000 jobs in June. Both numbers were revised upward with the July data. This gives us an average of 224,000 new jobs over the last three months. That is a pretty damn good story by any measure.
CEPR / August 07, 2018