employment

The Effects Of Money On Trade

By |2016-09-27T12:04:05-04:00September 27th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There can be little doubt now outside of orthodox economics that the global economy is actually slowing, not accelerating as has been predicted. Economists themselves, however, continue to claim that things are getting better when the data strongly suggests otherwise. The latest depressing figures are from a pair of (orthodox) supranational organizations. First, the World Trade Organization (WTO) drastically reduced [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Never Mind

By |2016-09-17T17:25:47-04:00September 17th, 2016|Alhambra Research, Commodities, Currencies, Markets|

Economic Reports Scorecard That improving economy the Fed has been touting? Well, as Emily Litella once said on Saturday Night Live, never mind. The surging economy of the Fed's feverish imagination melted away over the last two weeks amid a deluge of weak and weaker than expected data. The data was never that strong to begin with but as I [...]

Retail Sales: Often Undetectable Strangulation

By |2016-09-15T18:23:09-04:00September 15th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It follows that if we find production dropping into a two-year slump, sales are likely the cause. Retail sales continue to be just as stuck as the rest of the economy, an economic limbo between growth and recession with far more of recession than growth. After suffering one of the worst months in July, retail sales bounced back in August [...]

The JOLTS Phantom: Hires or Job Openings?

By |2016-09-08T19:26:42-04:00September 8th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In all honesty, I could start almost any piece I write with the phrase “economists are stumped.” It has become something of a baseline where there is some element or condition of the global economy that doesn’t make sense to them. The latest update in JOLTS for July continues to be faithful to the seeming contradiction. By view of the [...]

Slowing And Even Contracting: Hours & Earnings

By |2016-09-02T16:28:56-04:00September 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The primary symptom of the economic malaise or depression that has developed since the Great Recession (which wasn’t a recession) is an economy that works less and thus earns less. Such a condition would suggest a shrunken system or at least vastly diminished potential. That much is well-established even in the orthodox literature though it isn’t ever talked about publicly. [...]

Broader Alarm And Business Cycles

By |2016-08-16T18:43:24-04:00August 16th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The NBER does not define a recession as two consecutive quarters of contracting GDP. That is the mainstream definition that largely survives as a coping mechanism to deny what might otherwise be quite apparent. That was certainly true in 2008, as only Q1 GDP declined and it wasn’t until Q4 2008 that this mythical “technical” definition was met. The NBER [...]

Bi-Weekly Economic Review: Who’s Hiring?

By |2016-08-06T20:19:54-04:00August 6th, 2016|Alhambra Research, Economy, Markets|

Economic Reports Scorecard Two reports over the last two weeks epitomize the bifurcated nature of the US economy. The durable goods report last week was just plain awful from top to bottom. Orders down 4% month to month and 6.4% year over year. Ex-transportation -0.5% month to month and -3.6% year over year. Core capital goods orders up slightly month [...]

Statistics of Depression

By |2016-08-02T18:00:05-04:00August 2nd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Personal Savings Rate is a rather important economic indication. Because it is derived from the difference between income and spending, it can tell us a great deal about the state of the economy from the consumer perspective. Unfortunately, nobody can say with any degree of confidence what the savings rate is right now, or even what it has been [...]

Who’s The Barbarian?

By |2016-08-02T15:24:56-04:00August 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Very few people are against the concept of free trade, and those who are aren’t worth listening to. As a matter of economics (small “e”), free trade was established as a universal good that benefits all sides in one of the first scholarly debates that in the early 19th century helped turn political economics into a separate study meriting its [...]

Maybe Not As Much Difference Between LMCI and Jobs Report

By |2016-07-11T16:07:53-04:00July 11th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Even with the huge turnaround in the Establishment Survey’s headline number in June, the Fed’s alternate factor model could not manage a positive number. It was an improvement over May (revised), but nonetheless the sixth consecutive month of contraction. The monthly figures have been revised more pliably this year, but overall the view of the labor market from the Fed’s [...]

Go to Top