Capital Commerce
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Is a Recession Coming? Not If Consumers Can Help It
Continue reading… 0 CommentsRemember how one of James Baker's rationales for the Persian Gulf War, beta version, back in 1991 was "jobs, jobs, jobs"? See, that's pretty much the heart of my amateur rationale for why I think the economy will avoid a recession this year despite all the fears about housing. Jobs, jobs, jobs. Well, to be exact, jobs and income. Consider the following, and see if you agree:
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Rangel Proposal Won't Pacify the 'Seattle Democrats'
Continue reading… 0 CommentsHas Charlie Rangel, the personable chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, pulled it off? After unveiling "A New Trade Policy for America"which would attach tougher labor and environmental standards, among other provisions, to U.S. trade agreementsthe New York Democrat optimistically stated: "We are on the brink of restoring bipartisanship to American trade policy. The policies we've outlined today should send a clear message that this Congress wants trade, but we want trade that works for all Americans."
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Will the Shrinking Budget Deficit Save Bush's Tax Cuts?
Continue reading… 0 CommentsThe conventional wisdom in Washington, D.C., is that the Bush tax cuts, due to expire in 2010, won't be extended. The recent Democratic budget proposal, for instance, demands that the tax cuts get paid for to the tune of $200 billion a year starting in 2011. Well, maybe the child tax credit and marriage penalty stuff might get saved, but certainly not the marginal rate cuts and the reductions in dividend and capital-gains taxes.
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No Shelter From the Housing Storm
Continue reading… 0 CommentsAs the saying goes, never try to catch a falling knife. And what made me think of that? This: New single-family home sales declined 3.9 percent in February to an annual rate of 848,000, according to new Commerce Department data. That's the lowest level in almost seven years and much weaker than the 990,000 rate expected by the consensus. Plus, it's the absolute reverse of the 3.9 percent rise in existing home sales. Even worse, sales were revised lower for November, December, and January. Here are four Wall Street takes on the news, none of them particularly cheery:
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America Needs More Boing Boing Economics
Continue reading… 0 CommentsMy favorite site for all things weird, innovative, and creative is Boing Boing and not just because the site isas it correctly describes itself"a directory of wonderful things." It's also that it reminds me of how important innovation and creativity are for the future of the U.S. economy. (Yes, that's how my mind works.)
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Bush's Nuclear Option on Taxes
Continue reading… 0 CommentsThe Dow Jones industrial average is now back within 2.5 percent or so of its all-time high after rallying 3 percent from its 2007 nadir. (The Shanghai Sneeze and all that.) But should the Dow eclipse its old mark, there are some peopleother than massive short sellers, of coursewho won't be cheering. As they see it, stock market "records" are phony because the various averages and indexes don't take inflation into account. Here is how economist Jason Furman, in an analysis for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, dismissed the Dow when it hit a nominal high last October at 12,090:
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Why Wall Street Loves the Fed's Subtle Shift
Continue reading… 0 CommentsNo surprise, the Federal Reserve left short-term rates unchanged today at 5.25 percent. But in its statement after the meeting, the Fed explicitly expressed way more concern about inflation than economic growth. The Fed's Open Market Committee described price pressures as "somewhat elevated." (In its January comment, by contrast, the FOMC said inflation had "improved modestly.") What's more, the Fed said that its predominant policy concern was inflation rather than growth; the latter it expects "to continue at a moderate pace."
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President Bush's Tax Cut Suicide
Continue reading… 3 CommentsHere are 400 billion reasons President Bush's 2001and 2003 tax cuts may not see the next decade of the 21st century. The five-year federal budget proposed by Senate Democrats last week lets the reductions stay in place after their current 2010 expiration dateif backers can come up with $400 billion to pay for them in 2011 and 2012. Extending them to 2017 would "cost" $1.8 trillion. (This sort of static analysis oddly assumes that taxeswhether higher or lowerhave no economic impact.) Now given that the current Congress is having trouble coming up with $40 billion-$50 billion for a temporary fix to the alternative minimum tax, finding a spare $200 billion a year seems like a tall order indeed. "After 2008, the default budget position is going to be higher taxes," concluded Tom Gallagher, a veteran political analyst at International Strategy & Investment Group, in a recent chat.
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Mortgage Meltdown Not an Economy Killer
Continue reading… 0 Comments"What kind of dope are you smoking?" queries a faithful Capital Commerce reader, taking issue with my outlookas outlined in the recent posting "Subprime Scare Is March Madness"that problems in the subprime mortgage market will not lead to a recession. Yet I am going to stick to my guns on this one. Let me point to a new study by Christopher Cagan, director of research at First American CoreLogic, a Santa Ana, Calif.-based real-estate information firm. Cagan finds the following:
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Greenspan's Inequality Fix: Free Trade for Lawyers and Doctors
Continue reading… 0 CommentsTell you one thing, Alan Greenspan is way more fun now that he's no longer helming the Federal Reserve. One day he's telling rapt audiences that a recession is possiblehelping roil global financial markets in the processthe next day he's actually giving odds. (About 33 percent, if you're keeping track.)
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Warmer Weather Helps the Job Market
Continue reading… 0 CommentsAll the bears on the economy have been telling the rest of us to keep a close eye on jobless claims. If they start risingprobably driven by spillover from the weak housing market, the theory goesthat will be an important sign that the labor market is weakening. And if the labor market is weakening, so eventually will consumer spending. Thus, a recession is nigh. But today's data from the Labor Department show initial jobless claims fell 12,000 to 318,000 for the week ending March 10down from a peak of 359,000 in early February. That drop provides a nice piece of evidence that the February surge in jobless claims was indeed weather related and not a sign of an increasingly weak job market. As the econ team at Action Economics puts it:
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Subprime Scare Is March Madness
Continue reading… 0 CommentsMaybe the troubles in the subprime mortgage market will turn into some sort of nasty financial contagion that will dramatically worsen the broader housing market and nudge the economy into recession. But I have a difficult time seeing that happen as long as jobs and incomes are growing. For starters, the 97,000 jobs added in February isn't such a bad performance, considering the terrible weather that month that also seemed to quash retail sales. And if recent history is any guide, that jobs number will be revised higher.
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Just Dying to Worry About the Economy?
Continue reading… 0 CommentsAs I mentioned to CNBC's Maria Bartiromo last weekend on her show, The Wall Street Journal Report, right now the U.S. economy sort of reminds me of the dysfunctional family in the Oscar-nominated film Little Miss Sunshine: It doesn't work perfectly, but it gets the job done in the end. To economists Brian Wesbury and Robert Stein of First Trust Portfolios, today's soft economy reminds them of the slowdown during the 1990s expansion:
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Is McCain Really a Born-Again Tax Cutter?
Continue reading… 0 CommentsThe embryonic Rudy Giuliani campaign has gotten a lot of stick from critics who doubt he'll be able to effectively win over Christian conservatives because of his liberal social views. Less has been said about Sen. John McCain's need to win over another important GOP group: economic conservatives. McCain voted against President Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, though he voted in favor of the 2006 extension of Bush's capital gains and dividend tax cuts. Here's what McCain, who reportedly has been consulting with supply-side guru Arthur Laffer, says about tax cuts on his exploratory committee website:
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Consumers Are Still Key to Avoiding a Recession
Continue reading… 0 CommentsRecession predictions are all over the map right now. Alan Greenspan thinks there's a one-third probability. Economist David Rosenberg of Merrill Lynch estimates there's a 55 percent chance. Joel Prakken, chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers, thinks there's "well less" than a 50 percent chanceand dropped his rough estimate to around 20 percent after a bit of hectoring by me. (Prakken also expects growth in gross domestic product to "pop back up" in the second half of the year, to at least 3 percent.)
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How Democrats Plan to 'Rearrange' Your Taxes
Continue reading… 0 CommentsI'm not exactly sure what changes to the tax code New York Democrat Charles Rangel, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, is planning to propose to pay for a fix in the alternative minimum tax. In an interview with Bloomberg, he said Congress could "rearrange" tax rates. And here is what he told Fox News, when he asked if was going to try to roll back the Bush tax cuts:
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Where Are the Pro-Growth Presidential Candidates?
Continue reading… 0 CommentsWhile not discounting the importance of Ann Coulter's epithet and David Geffen's slams, someone might want to also ask the 2008 presidential candidates about their agendas to help grow the economy. Earlier today, the Labor Department reported that 2006 productivity growth was a so-so 1.6 percent, the weakest showing since 1997. Between 1997 and 2006, we had eight fantastic years of productivity growth, so maybe 2006 was a statistical fluke. Yet why take the chance? Productivity is the key, ultimately, to higher living standards and higher wages. Higher productivity makes dealing with problems from Social Security to healthcare to climate change a whole lot easier. Right now, the various presidential candidates are all a little light on the details of their economic agendas, so maybe their pro-growth policies are yet to come, whether it's tax reform or regulatory reform or more spending on basic research or government-sponsored innovation prizes. For now, though, Hillary Clinton is talking about confiscating oil profits and working on equal pay for women. Barack Obama is pounding the Iraq war. John McCain, at least on his website, is focused on fiscal discipline and ending wasteful spending. Rudolph Giuliani talks about cutting taxes on New Yorkers but fails to link to an overall growth strategy. Mitt Romney has come about the closest among the candidates to pushing a clear pro-growth message on trade, taxes, and innovation, but he still skimps on the details.
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Would a 2007 Recession Clinch 2008 for the Democrats?
Continue reading… 0 CommentsIt's been humorously suggested that Barack Obama's landslide 70-to-27 percent victory against Alan Keyes in the Illinois 2004 U.S. Senate race had one minor silver lining for Republicans. After that blowout, they knew exactly how big their core, crawl-across-broken-glass-to-vote-GOP base was in the Prairie State.
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Probing the Mind of Bush's Economist, Edward Lazear
Continue reading… 0 CommentsThe stock market, taxes, the budget, and inflation were among the topics Edward Lazear, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers for President Bush, and I chatted about in his office yesterday afternoon at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House. I will post a full transcript later, but here is the quick-and-dirty version for your perusal.
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Stock Market Drop Should Scare Congressional Protectionists
Continue reading… 0 CommentsRemember the 1994 movie Speed? It's the one where a madman (Dennis Hopper) takes a bunch of bus passengers hostage and then rigs the vehicle to explode if its speed falls below 50 mph. That's a pretty good way of thinking about China right now. The Chinese economy is all about speed. It's growing at about 10 percent a year, as it seems to do year after year. But if the economy slows just a bit, lots of bad things will very likely happen. While China is often portrayed as an unstoppable economic juggernaut, the mixed Chinese economydescribed by some as "Leninist corporatist"is full of stresses, inefficiencies, and imbalances. For example, the World Bank has estimated that if Chinese GDP growth fell by just 2 percentage points, 60 percent of the country's bank loans would become nonperforming. A sharply higher yuanthe goal of U.S. "fair trade" proponentsmight have just that effect. And this is an economy that needs to create 24 million new jobs a year to keep up with the flood of peasants continuing to pour into cities looking for a better life. Social unrest is already rising in China, and a slowdown would surely make things far worse. China may seem like a homogenous Borg-like entity to many westerners, but it's not. Back in the early 1990s, after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, one Pentagon study predicted that China could break up into a dozen or so smaller countries like one mega-Yugoslavia. But even continued fast growth is not enough. The country needs to get its ever wealthier consumers to save less and spend more in order to make the economy less dependent on investment-led growth. As Morgan Stanley economist Stephen Roach wrote after this week's big drop in the Chinese stock market: