Posts Tagged ‘American Economy’

The Debate Over Demand Management by Government

Thursday, January 12th, 2012


During the 1960′s, Keynesian fiscal policies (also known as “demand management” policies, since the government uses them to manage the level of aggregate demand in the economy) were regarded as unquestionably beneficial to the economy. In the early 1960′s, US President John F. Kennedy had implemented major tax cuts. These lifted the North American economy out of a recession and can be given credit for the economic boom that lasted through most of the 1960′s.

Following the late 1960′s, however, experience with government monetary and fiscal policy was much less satisfactory. Excessive stimulation in the late 1960′s led to rapid inflation; in response, strong anti-inflation policies were applied, causing unemployment to rise to high levels. Again in the 1970′s, excessive stimulation generated very severe inflation, followed by anti-inflation policies and a recession.

Clearly, something had gone wrong: the monetary and fiscal policies that were supposed to be used to reduce economic instability were being applied in a stop-go fashion that actually created instability, wrenching the economy from rapid inflation to recession and back again. The bad economic effects of these policy decisions have led some economists to argue that the government should not actively manage the level of demand in the economy with its monetary and fiscal policies. They believe that, due to political pressures and the problems of time lags, government attempts at “demand management” tend to become mismanagement, with negative effects on economic stability and prosperity.

To remedy this, these economists argue, governments should be required to followed fixed rules for monetary and fiscal policy rather than be allowed to adjust the federal budget and rate of growth of the money supply as they see fit. In particular, it is sometimes argued, the money supply as they see fit. In particular, it is sometimes argued, the money supply should be allowed to grow at only a certain rate and the federal budget should always be balanced. Such rules, these people say, would prevent governments from making major errors in economic policy, especially in the direction of overstimulation.

Other economists disagree with this view. They point out that our economic system has a history of instability, culminating in the Great Depression of the 1930′s. They argue that the government can and should actively intervene in the economy growth has been more rapid and recessions less frequent and less severe than before. They also argue that, if mistakes were made in the use of these policies, we should learn from those mistakes rather than abandon the policies altogether in the blind hope that it will all work out somehow.

Which view is correct? There seem to be elements of truth in both views. Management of demand by government can have either beneficial or negative effects on economic stability and prosperity, depending on whether the policies are used with the proper timing and strength. For such policies to benefit the economy, the government must base its decisions on the effectiveness of policies intended to stimulate the Canadian economy. Because so much (about 30 percent) of the respending effect of the multiplier is drained off by imports when Canadian authorities inject additional demand into the economy, the multiplier effect is quite small. As a result, policies intended to stimulate the Canadian economy have less impact on output and employment in Canada than Canadian authorities would like.

In summary, the heavy exposure of the Canadian economy to international economic forces creates special difficulties for Canadian economic policy-makers. In particular, the importance of exports and of foreign capital inflows places significant limitations on Canadian authorities in deciding monetary and fiscal policies, forcing them to consider not only domestic Canadian problems, but also international factors, when formulating policies.

 

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America as the reservoir of exports and foreign currency holdings

Sunday, October 11th, 2009


It can be more than said that the Obama administration is drawing more than concern worldwide from the forex foreign exchange communities , as well as the treasuries and investors worldwide across the globe due to scope and nature of the spending spree and the “bailouts”.& Are they bailouts or a whole radical change in the whole nature of the American economy.&; Is it all an attempt at social engineering on a most grand scale – almost as grand as the bailout or is it good medicine for the world economy and foreign currencies ?

; America has become the sponge of foreign currency and forex trade.&Where is& the large export market to export to to earn that foreign currency and maintain economic growth in countries across the globe ?; Its not Europe , its not Asia its only the states. True in the end those countries end up with a whack of US dollars to hold .  At least they got something worthwhile in the bargain.  Well at least before the Obama administation took office .

Key events in Obama’s first 100 days – Kansas City Star – 24: Obama addresses a joint session of Congress for the first time, focusing on economic issues.Feb. 26: Obama unveils a $3.6 trillion federal budget for 2010 and estimates that the federal deficit for 2009 will balloon to $1.75 trillion.Feb. 27: Obama announces withdrawal … March 16: Obama declares he will stop insurer American International Group Inc. from paying out millions in executive bonuses after receiving billions in federal bailout funds. …

100 Days Of Obama: Evidence Of Change Everywhere | The Seferm Post – Obama went pedal-to-the-metal to throw money at the problem, first with billions of bailout dollars, next with billions of stimulus dollars, then with a proposed budget expected to produce $9.3 trillion in deficits over the next decade. …

even yet another blag: Obama hearts fiscal discipline – In addressing fiscal discipline, Obama has adopted an alternative approach: Talking up his biggest failing. After passing a $3.5 trillion bailout and stimulus, he wants to reintroduce the pay-go? He says he’s identified $2 trillion in …
major.html”>Milwaukee Live: Obama Spending Spee Creating Major Concerns – During the first 100 days of his presidency, Obama has signed a $787 billion stimulus bill into law, proposed an eye-popping $3.6 trillion budget for the next fiscal year, taken over a massive $700 billion Wall Street bailout program …
Capital on the Offensive against the Working Class – Class … – Since the economic crisis began, the Bush administration and then the Obama administration have handed trillions of dollars over to the banks,

Obama’s Economic Plan ‘Dangerous’ « One Man’s Thoughts – Obama has said that his bailouts and economic recovery plans will boost the deficit, to $1.75 trillion this year. But Cheney said his concern isn’t only long-term deficits but that Obama “is also redefining that relationship between …

Perception Of Tea Parties Was Incorrect – This was about spending at the federal level that has gone completely berserk, about an exploding deficit that threatens the quality of life of our kids (and probably that of our kids’ kids), and about a bailout mentality in Washington … The deficit in the first year of Obama’s presidency: $1.85 trillion. Obama’s first deficit will amass more debt than all 43 of his predecessors — combined! His own budget director has admitted that the administration’s 10-year budget …

GM’s Place » Obama’s Two Faced Approach To Spending – In the early months of his presidency, President Obama has shown he isn’t afraid to spend billions of dollars on corporate bailouts or to run up trillions of dollars in U.S. debt to battle an economic crisis. …

Ron Paul Votes NO BAILOUT (Speech on the House Floor) | Liberty … – September 29, 2008, US House of Representatives. Ron Paul [R-TX] votes NO on the bailout bill. AYES 205 NOES 228 clerk. … Browse: Home / Protecting Our Liberty / Ron Paul Votes NO BAILOUT (Speech on the House Floor) …. They are the ones that are barrowing Trillions of Dollars that they can’t pay back, and The people of America are the people that barrow from the government, and pay our taxes with that barrowed unpayable money. adriannacruz …

portland imc – 2009.04.26 – Obama Draws Fire from Socialists and … – President Obama’s fiscal road map, the bailouts for the financial sector, the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan, and the bulging national budget, will likely cost the nation more than $7 trillion over the next year with many socialists …

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Early Signs of Recovery in the Crucial American Economy ?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009


After a plunge lasting three years, houses have finally become cheap enough to lure buyers. That, in turn, is stabilizing prices, generating hope that the real estate market is beginning to recover.

Eight cities, including Chicago, Cleveland, Denver and San Francisco, showed price increases in May, up from four in April and one in March, according to data released Tuesday. Two other cities, Charlotte, N.C., and New York, were flat.

For the first time since early 2007, a composite index of 20 major cities was virtually flat, instead of down.

“We’ve found the bottom,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist for First American CoreLogic, a data firm.

The release of the surprisingly strong Case-Shiller Price Index, compiled by Standard & Poor’s, followed earlier reports that sales of existing homes rose last month for the third consecutive time, while sales of new homes rose in June by the largest percentage in eight years.

All of these improvements are tentative, and come after a relentless decline that knocked more than half the value off houses in the worst-hit cities.

Some skeptics say they believe the market is merely pausing before it resumes falling and that much of the life in the market is coming from speculators. Even the most enthusiastic analysts acknowledge that rising unemployment, another leap in foreclosures or a significant jump in interest rates could snuff out progress.

Still, hope is growing in some quarters that the worst has passed.

“Recession is over, economy is recovering — let’s look forward and stop the backward-looking focus,” John E. Silvia, the Wells Fargo chief economist, wrote Tuesday in a research note.

Kirit Shah decided to look forward a few weeks ago. A retired forensic chemist for the New York Police Department, he closed on a house in Royal Palm Beach, Fla.

Mr. Shah was not dissuaded when the salesman at K. Hovnanian Homes told him the five-bedroom place had been empty since it was finished three years ago. “It was waiting for me,” said Mr. Shah, 64. “I’m on a lakefront. I never dreamed I would be on a lakefront. I’m within walking distance of a swimming pool.”

But the thing he likes best is this: he paid $260,000 for the five-bedroom house, half of what that model was fetching during the boom. “An excellent deal,” he said. “Plus I got a good rate on my mortgage, under 5 percent.”

Turning markets are full of uncertainty. If Mr. Shah was one reason new home sales were up 11 percent in June from May, it is unclear just how many others like him are out there.

Brad Hunter, chief economist for Metrostudy, a research firm, said the new home numbers appeared to illustrate less a return of buyers like Mr. Shah and more a resurgence of investors and speculators. Metrostudy’s own data showed that the number of buyers during the second quarter who actually moved into their new house declined 2.6 percent.

“Investors are turning right around and putting the houses on the market for sale or for rent,” Mr. Hunter said. “What appears to have been an absorption of excess inventory can be just a changing of ownership of that inventory.”

The good news in the Case-Shiller index, the most widely watched source of price information about the housing market, is equally provisionary. Tracking only large urban areas, the monthly index does not represent the country as a whole.

The Case-Shiller figures released Tuesday showed May prices were down 17.1 compared with May 2008. As bad as that may sound, it was the fourth consecutive month that price declines slowed — a step in the right direction, but perhaps not cause for widespread celebration.

More attention was focused on the news that, when May was compared with April, the price index for 20 major cities showed a half-percent gain. It was the first month-over-month increase in the index in 34 months.

“It is very possible that years from now we will say that April 2009 was the trough in home prices,” said Maureen Maitland, vice president for index services at Standard & Poor’s.

When the numbers were adjusted for seasonal factors, however — the usual way housing figures are presented — the slight gain disappeared and the index was essentially flat. Half of the cities showed continued declines.

One reason the market is perking up in some places, real estate agents say, is the encouragement offered by such measures as the first time buyer’s tax credit of $8,000.

All the more reason, said the National Association of Realtors, to not only extend the credit but expand it. The association is lobbying for the current credit, which expires in December, to be replaced with a $15,000 credit for all buyers.

“This is a relatively low-cost way to keep the housing market moving forward,” said Paul Bishop, the association’s managing director of research.

Another reason for the market’s resurgence is the prevalence of foreclosures, which make up about a third of all existing home sales. In some troubled regions, agents say they cannot remember the last transaction that did not involve a bank disposing of a property.

These communities are not yet showing any improvement in prices. Las Vegas was the worst-performing city in the May Case-Shiller index, falling 2.6 percent. Prices have fallen there by a third in the last year.

“The mom and pop that work at the Hilton can now afford a home here again,” said Justin Pechonis, a Las Vegas real estate agent. “Las Vegas is a great place to buy now.” But not from him. Sickened by seeing so many clients foreclosed on, he is getting out of the business. He now drives a taxi.

All this uncertainty breeds a hesitancy that seems to show up in nearly every sale, especially at the higher end of the market. When Margot and Pascal Lalonde decided in April to sell their two-bedroom condominium in the North End of Boston, they methodically quizzed six experienced agents about a good price.

List it for under $500,000 unless you want to be here for months, said one agent. Two others said they should demand $675,000. The other three were in between.

“In a market with so few sales, no one knows what to do,” said Ms. Lalonde, a consultant.

After 80 days on the market and two small price reductions, the condo is now under contract for $550,000. The buyers examined the apartment six times. The Lalondes, who are moving to Short Hills, N.J., expect to be no less careful when they buy.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/business/economy/29housing.html?_r=1&th&emc=th

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American Auto Industry – The Bond Markets

Sunday, May 24th, 2009


Is it a time of economic change ?  Change for the better or the worse ?  It seems as if the underpinning of the American economy have come to a head , if not decline and defeat .  Yet for the world as well .  What other major dumping ground for exports exists worldwide .  Certainly not Europe and the United Kingdom , certainly not Japan or Asia.  Certainly not China with its billions of consumers which the western world ran after in a panic some time ago – creating factories and skills for which to exploit the gigantic Chinese market – only to discover that these enterprises became export factory machines for export of product back to countries of origin – wiping out high paying jobs and careers in those principalities as well.

However its been a long time come to roost.  Some – such as economist of note M.L. Labovitvch , noted of great fame – that it could be seen coming 40 years ago.  Are the Japanese going to provide you a job – he was noted to have refrained.  Yet export tariffs protected the US auto industries.  Its workers could always ask for more as the union in a manner pieced them off.  The company can pay more , its the company bosses …. fault.   Yet neither realized that even if upper management did not want to produce small cars – little econoboxes , no money in it etc etc and so produced stupid vehicles which no American consumer in their right mind would be aka  early Chevy Vegas noted as the worst car Detroit ever built.

What neither of them ( the auto execs,  the union chiefs and the workers) realized that consumers were voting with their feet and money.  It was the consumer who was paying for their livelihood not  the “company bosses” or even the union. It might be noted that the short term answer to this was the SUV craze.  Yet this was shortsighted to the extreme.  In the end you get what you deserve – however in this case the American economy , consumer , world economy and even the bond markets have paid for the hit.

Nader to Congress: Intervene in the Auto Bailout | The Moderate Voice – Today Nader says Congress should intervene in the auto industry bailout: “The government-led restructuring of Chrysler and General Motors has been twice delegated — first by Congress to the Executive, and then by the President to a task …

Instapundit » Blog Archive » AUTO BAILOUT WATCH: Investor … – BURGERS BECOME steadily more refined…. » May 22, 2009. AUTO BAILOUT WATCH: Investor Confidence Ebbs. Gee, I wonder why? Plus, bad news on auto production and sales. Posted at by Glenn Reynolds at 12:34 pm …

Obama Auto Bailout Under Attack | TheDetroitBureau.com – The Obama Administration’s proposed bailout of General Motors and Chrysler is facing a growing chorus of criticism – and, significantly, it’s coming from.

Japanese Firms Line Up for US Auto Bailout – Companies * Asia … – More Japanese suppliers to General Motors and Chrysler have applied to a US government program to guarantee the debts of the two ailing auto giants as the chances of GM following Chrysler into bankruptcy keeps rising, …

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Recessionary Markers Emerging Appearing North American Economy

Friday, October 17th, 2008


The crisis on Wall Street is hitting the factory floor.

A raft of dismal reports yesterday showed North American manufacturing is tanking, prompting more predictions that Canada will follow the United States into recession.

U.S. industrial production suffered its worst monthly decline in 34 years in September, plunging 2.8 per cent as the global financial crisis caused businesses to retrench and cut back investments on everything from equipment to commodities.

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank said its business activity index skidded in September to its lowest since October, 1990, in what Goldman Sachs economists called “a horrendous report pointing to substantial deterioration in the manufacturing sector.”

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* Go to the Report on Business section

The Globe and Mail

Canadian manufacturing numbers from August indicate a major slowdown was taking hold even before the credit crisis kicked into high gear.

Manufacturing shipments fell 3.7 per cent in August, the largest decline since December, 2007, as weaker global economic activity spilled into Canada.

“The near future for Canadian manufacturers looks grim as August is just the beginning of what we expect to be a rocky road ahead,” Diana Petramala, an economist at TD Economics, said in a note to clients.

At Bank of Montreal, the predictions were even more dire. The bank said Canada is all but certain to suffer a recession alongside its largest trading partner, as consumers on both sides of the border rein in spending amid carnage in stocks, housing and commodities.

At Kelowna, B.C.-based Campion Marine Inc., Canada’s largest boat manufacturer, production is being drastically reduced as U.S. consumers stop buying luxury items.

“The world financial crisis is definitely having an impact. We’re down in production a good 40 per cent or 50 per cent. Right now, it is very difficult to sell a boat to an American,” Brock Elliott, Campion’s general manager, said in an interview.

The family-owned company, which will celebrate its 35th anniversary this year, has taken a number of steps to weather the economic storm. Staff has been reduced to 125 employees from 195, more efficient production methods have been put in place and the company has developed new products to appeal to shifting consumer tastes, including more fuel-efficient and environmentally friendly boats.

And while the recent plunge in the Canadian dollar is also helping Campion reduce costs, Mr. Elliott said this downturn is as severe as the nasty recession of 1982 and noted the company is in for even tougher times if Canadian consumers fall away.

Auto manufacturing in Canada has already taken a pounding, and the sector’s woes are mounting.

Vehicle production slumped 18 per cent in August from year-earlier levels as auto makers put the brakes on Canadian production amid a deep slump in U.S. sales.

Vehicle output plunged again in September by 16 per cent from year-earlier levels.

The tentacles of the auto slowdown spread widely throughout the economy, so auto parts makers have been cutting back – Magna International Inc. trimmed 400 jobs last month at a plant that makes frames for General Motors Corp. pickups and sport utility vehicles.

There’s likely more to come because GM announced more cuts in pickup truck production yesterday, three days after moving up the closing of an sport utility vehicle plant in Janesville, Wis., by two years to this December.

Auto parts maker Johnson Controls Inc. added to the job cuts in the sector yesterday with an announcement that it will close a plant in Whitby, Ont., at the end of the year, eliminating 400 jobs.

Jayson Myers, an economist and president of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, believes that things are going to get worse for Canadian goods producers before they get better, as orders from U.S. and foreign customers are cancelled.

“I think going into early next year, it’s going to be extremely challenging here and very much tied to the problems around credit. Companies just can’t finance new orders in the United States, and that’s a major part of our market. So that’s having an impact right now and I think there is worse to come – much worse to come,” he said.

Gene Dunn, chief executive officer of Monarch Industries, a Winnipeg-based manufacturer of hydraulic cylinders and portable cement mixers, said: “I think this is going to affect all industries.”

His company exports about 75 per cent of its products to the U.S. and large equipment makers such as Deere & Co. and CNH Case New Holland. Customers are scaling back orders, Mr. Dunn said. “One customer yesterday said that he didn’t want anything further shipped this year.”

Monarch, with revenue of about $100-million a year and factories in Winnipeg and Winkler, Man., has not reduced its 570-person work force, he said, but might have to do so next year if the slump in orders continues.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20081017.RBANKSECONOMY17/TPStory/Business

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America passes a milestone! « Fabius Maximus – Government vs. manufacturing numbers for NJ are not indicated, so I’m not sure what your point is. BTW, NJ has been rated as the least business-friendly state in the US, and business owners are voting with their feet. Yes, the number of …

JG-TC.com > Opinion > LETTER: US economy being taken down wrong road – Over the past 30 years, the number of manufacturing jobs in the U.S. has declined from 19 million to 13 million — and is still shrinking. We are on our way to becoming a service economy instead of a manufacturing economy. …

Manufacturing slump sends fear across Asia — Vietnam’s largest … – The numbers bear that out. While overall American imports dropped 12% in November from a year earlier, imports rose from Bangladesh and from Vietnam. Each country shipped more knit apparel to the United States, and Vietnam also shipped …

beyond global financial crisis: China, India, US competiton, jobs … – In the last 26 years China has received more than 600 billion US dollars in FDI. This FDI has prompted new growth, especially in the manufacturing area. Number three is international trade. So far, China’s international trade has grown …

Ten Hard Questions Facing the ‘Car Czar’ – WSJ.com – As a whole, the industry accounts for 13% of U.S. manufacturing jobs. But such numbers are a big part of the bailout debate. Former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who doesn’t see a need for bailing out the U.S. companies, …

Futronomics: contrarian analysis of global macro trends … – However, even though the manufacturing numbers look horrible in Germany and Asia right now, it is to their long-term benefit that their economies were at least based on something tangible (even if that something was unsustainable US …

US Econ 090123 – As Bernard Baumohl puts it, the number of hours worked in manufacturing is especially sensitive to any shift in the public’s demand for goods: • • 41.5 hours and above – the economy is revving up less than 41 hours – the economy is …

Lean Manufacturing Blog, Kaizen Articles and Advice | Gemba Panta Rei – Becoming number one was not the stated goal, but expanding market share in GM’s key markets certainly was a means to their goal. As with all things there is a cost, and this expansion has weakened Toyota to an uncertain degree. …

The Outsourcing of All Things « Perry Marshall Adwords Advertising – Critics focus on the perceived decline of US manufacturing, although this is a natural and necessary process. While the US workforce employed in manufacturing has decreased from 28.4% 1960 to 11.7% in 2002, productivity has increased by …

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