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To: SeekAndFind

This economy will never recover to a thriving capitalist prosperity until the yoke of these clowns is removed.

No one is going to invest either in capital or labor when that investment could end up evaporating due to some whim of this regime in the next day/week/month/year.


2 posted on 04/12/2010 6:03:29 AM PDT by MrB (The difference between a humanist and a Satanist is that the latter knows who he's working for.)
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To: MrB

Donald Luskin, Chief Investment Officer of Treadn Macroanalytics ( and no fan of Obama’s policies) observes....

“Depending on exactly how you look at it, the labor market is telling us that there is a real recovery getting started. But at the same time it’s telling us that things are as bad as ever.

Since the report the stock market has crept up to new recovery highs.

On the plus side, with 162,000 net new payroll jobs in March, we had the first triple-digit gain in payrolls since November 2007. That’s true even if you take away the 48,000 temporary jobs generated by the 2010 census.

That said, this puts us only one month off the lows. As of February, just one month before, we’d lost 8.363 million jobs from the pre-recession peak. The number was the same in December, after which a small gain in January gave us a false start. Was March’s gain another false start? Who knows, but it’s an indisputable fact that we’re really only one month of the very bottom.

But there are some clues that this one data-point could nevertheless be the signal of a new upward trend in jobs. Jobs in the private sector — in other words, jobs outside of government — have been growing now for three months, not just one. True, the private sector has been the recipient of a lot of government “stimulus” money, but there’s still a difference between a real job created by a real company, versus a make-work job created by the government.

So three months of growth does tell a good story.

The problem is that the jobs market is like a leaky bucket. Yes, we’re beginning to pour water into it. But it’s so leaky, the water level isn’t rising. What I mean by that is that it’s not enough to create new jobs. We have to create enough new jobs to make a difference, and so far we’re not doing that.

You can see evidence of that in the unemployment rate. It’s off from its high of 10.1% last October, but only down to 9.7% — which is still a horrible number. But what worries me is that the unemployment rate went up this month, not down. It wasn’t enough to change the headline number — it was reported as “unchanged.” But it was actually up, and that’s moving in the wrong direction.

How can the unemployment rate rise when new jobs are created? Simple. The rate is calculated by taking the number of unemployed as a fraction of the labor force, which is defined as all the people either working or looking for work. Even when more people are working, the number of unemployed can still rise, if new people enter the labor force looking for a job but unable to find one.

We have rising employment and rising unemployment at the same time!

The more people who have jobs, the more income they earn, the more they spend, the more the economy grows. It’s all good. But that doesn’t change the fact that an increasing number of people are unemployed, and so far the economy isn’t strong enough to do anything about that. It’s no wonder the stock market doesn’t quite know what to do!

Here are some of the implications. Even with more people working, the chance of getting a job if you are currently unemployed has fallen to a new all-time low (the data begins in 1948). As of March, if you were out of a job, the probability that you’d get a job that month was only 18.7%. Let’s express that in the language of horse betting. The odds are about 5-to-1 against you. You are a long-shot.

Also, in March, the number of people working part time — but who are ready, willing and able to work full-time — rose by 263,000. That’s only 1,000 less than the growth in employment of 264,000. We could almost say that every new job created in March was a part-time job, taken by some disappointed person who really wanted a full-time job.

This is a portrait of an economy that is no longer deep in recession. The economy is recovering. But it’s not really growing, either. It’s just stabilizing, catching its breath, hopefully preparing to grow.”


15 posted on 04/12/2010 6:11:34 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: MrB

Yup. Hayek nailed it when he said that arbitrary, capricious government power is a absolute economy killer.


19 posted on 04/12/2010 6:15:12 AM PDT by thecabal (Destroy Progressivism)
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To: MrB
All things "Slate" are harmful to mind, finance, and well-being.Ex: One of my credit cards recently became "Slate" and upped the % of interest from 9.9 to 13.4. I paid off and closed.

vaudine

44 posted on 04/12/2010 7:20:39 AM PDT by vaudine (,,)
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