gdp

Yellen Says There Is No Economic Problem While Describing A Serious Economic Problem

By |2015-09-18T16:04:49-04:00September 18th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the difference between your rhetoric and your actions is wide, inconsistency is pretty much axiomatic. However, Janet Yellen’s press conference was much more than that. I understand it’s a lot to charge blatant dishonesty, but almost everything she said is cow manure. And I make that assertion not on my own reading of the situation, but on hers. The [...]

It Was Never An Option

By |2015-08-31T16:17:04-04:00August 31st, 2015|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In her testimony before Congress in July, Janet Yellen laid out the same talking points that have been propagated onto Americans time and time again these past eight years. The economy is moving forward and the Fed is doing and has done everything it can, and that there are “green shoots” still though no full and mature growth. Low oil [...]

Turning Just 2.4% Income Growth Into A Robust Recovery

By |2015-08-28T17:47:49-04:00August 28th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today’s release of personal income and spending is very much related to the revised GDP figures, though I have no doubt that the BEA wishes it were not. To start with, the ongoing chain of benchmark revisions has produced an inordinately volatile set of economic accounts. That is quite against the stated purpose of all this adjusting and statistical intrusiveness; [...]

GDP Might Have Been Almost 4% In Q2, But GDI of Just 0.6% Has The Quite Damning Weight Of Revisions

By |2015-08-27T14:30:12-04:00August 27th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Lost in the euphoria over second quarter GDP revisions is the ongoing corporate struggle in terms of profits and how that suggests a more than reasonable proportion of GDP’s ability to measure the economy is overstated. To this point, I had focused more so on the productivity problems as they related to a potential over-optimism of the labor market but [...]

How To Lose A Decade

By |2015-08-19T13:37:30-04:00August 19th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Let’s start by stipulating that the ECB’s operations are far more complex. This is the case both in terms of actual operations but also in trying to figure out what goes where and why. That is at the start unsurprising given the European monetary framework; even though the euro as a denomination is continental there are still national fissures in [...]

Japan Is A Stimulated Disaster; Why Not More?

By |2015-08-17T18:16:18-04:00August 17th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Japanese economy sank yet again, more than suggesting there is no recovery from the “inflation”-led recession that began six months before any tax change. Almost right from the start of QQE, Q4 2013, Japan’s GDP has either been contracting or barely rising. The net result is the monetary hole left behind by so many flawed theories. Primary among them, [...]

QE Or Not, Europe Goes Nowhere

By |2015-08-14T16:31:52-04:00August 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

European GDP disappointed for Q2, which was only surprising to those expected something out of QE. At +0.3% (Q/Q), the European economy is clearly stuck in the same mindless rut that has taken hold since the 2011 crisis re-flaring. While recent convention holds, in light of this year’s QE, that the ECB has been idle during this time that simply [...]

Revolt of The Numbers

By |2015-08-13T12:04:39-04:00August 13th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In March 2013, orthodox economists were brimming with optimism. There were some rough patches in 2012, to be sure, but the Fed stepped up with a QE3 in MBS and then a QE4 in UST. Since the power of monetarism is a central pillar of the orthodox outlook, the future could only be even brighter than it was. The lackluster [...]

Productivity And The Dueling Economies

By |2015-08-11T17:17:25-04:00August 11th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Productivity estimates were better in Q2 than certainly Q1, even revised, but that still doesn’t change the clear disassociation between the BLS’s version of the economy and the BEA’s. That disparity becomes even messier as the BEA’s last benchmark revision sawed off significant “output” dating back to the now-recognized 2012 slowdown. In tandem, the BLS only revised hours worked (back [...]

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