CERF Blog: Growth
Jeffrey Speakes Downgrade On Friday, August 5 after the market close, Standard and Poor’s (S&P) announced a downgrade of U.S. Treasury debt from AAA to AA+. This announcement followed Congressional approval of a debt limit increase and ten year plan to cut projected deficit relative to baseline by $2.1 trillion. Evidently, the debt deal was… Read more
Until today, we’ve been confident that we could avoid a double-dip recession. Too be sure, we’ve acknowledged that risks abound, particularly in the Middle East and in the Eurozone. However, the recovery seemed to be proceeding about as we had expected, slowly, certainly slower than most forecasts. We believed that the United States economy, absent… Read more
For about six quarters we have watched various measures of strong United States economic performance: Corporate profits have been very strong. The Dow has almost doubled since the early 2009 bottom of about 6,600. Productivity has been strong. During 2010 quarter 4, consumption grew 4 percent, significantly above the 3.4 percent post-war average, and consumption… Read more
Previously Published March 22, 2011 Forecasting is a challenge in rapidly changing times, and these are very rapidly changing times. At the beginning of the year, it would have been unbelievable if someone had said that Mubarak would be deposed, we would be in a war in Libya, and there would be general uprisings throughout… Read more
Previously published March 22, 2011 California remains mired in something like a zombie state, not quite dead, but certainly not vigorous, moving but with no clear direction. Perhaps, jobs and migration data best show California listless nature. Jobs have been increasing in almost every sector, but that job growth has been anemic. We saw only… Read more
Previously published in the California Economic Forecast, March 24, 2011 If you are looking for a summary statistic on the United States economy, I recommend you consider bank charge-offs. These are the loans that banks have written off their books, because the probability of collecting them is so low. It doesn’t mean that the borrowers… Read more
Let’s see: The President wants to double exports in five years.* The Treasury is the appropriate department to create and implement a plan to double exports. Tim Geithner runs the Treasury. Tim Geithner denies deliberately weakening the dollar. See why I’m having cognitive dissonance here? How can you possibly double exports without lowering the cost… Read more
People are getting excited because China’s economy is expected to soon exceed the United States economy in size. They seem to think this is bad. Here’s an example. This is really a stupid thing to worry about, perhaps even a really stupid thing to worry about. China has a population of 1.34 billion, almost 20… Read more
Dan, my favorite workaholic, sent the following from China and asked that I post it: Dan Hamilton October 28, 2010 The first estimate of United States third quarter Gross Domestic Product came out today. The preliminary estimate of third quarter real GDP growth was 2.0 percent, which follows a 1.7 percent growth rate during the… Read more
We have some economic news out today. 453,000 filed initial unemployment claims, and the second quarter GDP estimate is 1.7 percent growth. The news people are practically ecstatic over this, proclaiming it’s good news. The markets seem to agree. Each of the stock markets are up right now. True enough, the unemployment claims are down… Read more