1/12/2009 11:44:59 AM
^ never said U6 was bunk. In fact, I said the opposite. I only said that it wasn't the best way to measure cyclical variations in unemployment (deviations from the "natural" rate of unemployment that results from structural unemployment/job search/etc). Then, I gave several arguments for why I thought this was the case. And what group of professionals agree with me? Well, the Bureau of Labor Statistics for one, who releases U3 as its official measure of unemployment (not U6). The reason your bloggers repeat their mantra that U6 > U3 is because it is actually a fairly unorthodox position. If everyone already agreed with them, they wouldn't need to keep insisting that they are right. I know the BLS doesn't have a slick website like most bloggers you read, but please trust me that they are not a bunch of cranks and quacks. That is all. [Edited on January 12, 2009 at 12:54 PM. Reason : ``]
1/12/2009 12:41:44 PM
1/12/2009 2:55:48 PM
Here is another authority that is looking at U6http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE5077TM20090109And Barry...shocker...doesn't agree with himhttp://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/01/unemployment-rate/Now I'm really confused Sucks. Can you resolve all this conflict for me? You know all these bloggers and their motivations, please tell it to me?
1/12/2009 3:13:16 PM
^ Neither of those articles you link discuss the merits of U6 v U3. "Barry" is talking about an alternative measure of unemployment (not U3 or U6) created by John Williams. And none of your previous points really touch on anything I said earlier ("Barry" doesn't make a red cent for picking which unemployment measure he likes best and nothing you said discredits the BLS as a quality organization for data collection and analysis).I think I'm about done. Have a good afternoon.
1/12/2009 3:44:43 PM
From what I have read here, Socks is reasonable and making defensible arguments. nattrngnabob is not.
1/12/2009 3:59:47 PM
1/12/2009 4:34:08 PM
1/12/2009 8:53:11 PM
An interesting perspective on the current recession: The Minneapolis Fed looks at the percentage change in nonfarm payrolls since the beginning of the recession and compares it with the 10 previous post-war recessions. While the velocity of change has been violent since September, the overall change since the recession began is not atypical, partly due to the relatively mild changes in payrolls the first half of the 2008. The recession isn't over, so its too soon to say how this will compare with past recessions, but the below is a little more reassuring than what the press likes to portend.Here is the same with GDP:http://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications_papers/studies/recession_perspective/index.cfm[Edited on January 12, 2009 at 9:03 PM. Reason : .]
1/12/2009 8:59:24 PM
Circuit City pwnt. Not really a surprise. Going out of business liquidation to start tomorrow and expected to last 6-8 weeks. They employed 30,000+.http://www.globest.com/news/1328_1328/northernvirginia/176378-1.html
1/16/2009 8:48:42 PM
Here's some nice data that illustrate that the job market was still much worse in 1982 than it is today (even after including discouraged and "underemployed" workers). I just hope legislators keep that in mind when they are scrambling to find 100s of Billions of dollars to "save" our economy (by building windmills in MA!!!). Interestingly, looking at recessions since the 1970's, it looks like it takes more and more time for employment to reach its pre-recession peak. I wonder why that is. I think one reason might be the decline of manufacturing and the rise of the "creative" economy. If you work in a factory, it's relatively easy to lay people off and bring them back as needed. You left making paper, you come back making the same kind of paper the same way. How would do that at a internet start-up in 2001? I dunno. It's just a guess.[Edited on January 21, 2009 at 2:11 PM. Reason : ``]
1/21/2009 2:09:05 PM
Time to start blaming Obama for the economy.
1/21/2009 2:10:27 PM
Some selected excerpts from the Time Magazine Cover Story "Why We're So Gloomy"http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,974645,00.html
1/23/2009 4:30:48 PM
^ Yah, I saw that over at Marginal Revolution. I think it serves as a really good example of how the media (and some economists) can cash in on hysteria. I saw an interesting Update on the webpage you linked to...that article was actually written 10 months after the recession ENDED (before before the end was announced by NBER). I think that should really humble anyone writing about current events.I think another interesting read from the early 1990's is Paul Krugman's "Age of Diminished Expectations" (actually one of my favorite books). He concludes with a discussion about how the US economy would suffer from slow growth for the foreseeable future...only a couple of years before the tech boom led to the longest economic expansion in history.
1/25/2009 10:53:35 AM
Krugman underestimated the financial alchemy that Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Chicago, etc, wrought on the world. And guess what, he was still correct in that all the economic expansion you're describing is now being undone at an unprecedented rate. It's almost like the past decade didn't exist.
1/25/2009 11:46:45 AM
Odd that you say that. The inflation adjusted GDP is still far higher today than it was ten years ago. All the technology deployed over the past ten years is still deployed. I have yet to see roving gangs of the unemployed ripping up fiber optic from the street. My PC is still far faster today than it was ten years ago. Maybe you meant it another way?
1/25/2009 1:12:42 PM
natt, Incorrect, friend. Not even Paul Krugman is making that argument. If you buy the idea that this is a "demand-driven" recession, then you can't help but agree with Barack Obama said on inauguration day--that we still have the same productive capacity we did before the recession began and that we only need the will to prime the demand pump (with infrastructure spending, tax cuts, and printing lots of money). Of course, I personally don't believe that's the case, but I still don't see how you can argue that the productivity gains from the 1990's tech boom suddenly disappeared because a particular type of security market is in the toilet. The two are totally unrelated.But whatever. It takes all kinds....
1/25/2009 1:17:32 PM
Anyways, to bring the discussion back to its original point...economic fortunes are hard to divine from media reports and even current economic data. Very brilliant economists can be totally wrong about where the economy stands and where it is headed.If one can admit this (and I don't see how one can't), then one should be very skeptical about the power of a small number of individuals to centrally plan the economy. This goes back to Hayek's essays on knowledge and society over 60 years ago.That isn't to say that government intervention can never do more good than harm, only that it is very very difficult to do so.
1/25/2009 1:24:28 PM
1/25/2009 1:33:14 PM
1/25/2009 2:10:32 PM
1/25/2009 2:21:57 PM
^ Your argument assumes that the past 18 years were a temporary diversion from a longer-term trend of mediocre growth. There is really no evidence for that and you haven't tried to offer any. Like I've been saying, and Paul Krugman and Barack Obama have been saying, there were real improvements in domestic productivity over the past 18 years that have made us a richer nation than we were in 1990. And there is nothing about the current crisis that suggests we can't return to a period of economic growth. If you believe differently, you need to post some evidence to the contrary. And if you agree that the economy is incredibly complex and that even smart economists misunderstand what's going on in front of their own eyes, then that must surely make you skeptical about the government spending 100s of billions of dollars on stimulus packages when we're not really sure what the actual benefit of those packages will be (even Christine Romer's estimates show a relatively small impact on unemployment from Obama's package).Of course, since you still vigorously support the fiscal stimulus (without any expressed doubts), I'm not exactly sure you get what you're saying. You seem to be trying to say that it's obvious that even smart economists can be very wrong about the economy while at the same time trying to say that "we really actually know what's going on THIS time and we know exactly what to do about it!! WE DO!!! THIS TIME we got it, right." But I'm not really in the mood to feed your trolling. I would probably feel differently if you would offer evidence and arguments instead of insults. Please consider that in our future discussions (I have to work on a report now).[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 3:17 PM. Reason : ``]
1/25/2009 3:14:02 PM
1/25/2009 4:55:35 PM
1/25/2009 5:26:00 PM
This graph is a little interesting, I thought, that LS posted in another thread...If the population is growing, why isn't the private manufacturing and construction industries increasing their payrolls? I'm guessing technological advancements account for the missing workers, or maybe they just aren't paying their people as much.But in any case, this does make me wonder at what point will we have too many people to have jobs for? Does such a point exist? How does China deal with this issue?
1/25/2009 5:35:52 PM
There's a neat show on the History Channel right now, comparing the 1929 crisis to now.
1/25/2009 6:31:24 PM
agentlion
1/26/2009 7:02:06 AM
ahahahhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoEbMrZ5uaAHilarious. Please to embed. Language very NSFW.
1/26/2009 9:24:32 AM
1/26/2009 10:01:10 AM
1/26/2009 10:33:51 AM
1/26/2009 5:36:06 PM
1/26/2009 6:07:47 PM
1/26/2009 10:39:12 PM
1/27/2009 5:45:09 PM
^ thanks, i wasn't going to argue. but I went back to that graph and looked - so, yes, over 5 years, GDP looks linear. But take that graph out to the max, and this is what you getyou see a clear curve, and if you change the Y-axis to a logorithmic scale, then you would see the graph appear linear. Same is true of the stock market. It grows at, what.... 6-8% per year? On a log scale, it looks fine - perfectly sustainableon a linear scale? JESUS FUCK, what the hell?![Edited on January 27, 2009 at 6:19 PM. Reason : .]
1/27/2009 6:18:27 PM
1/27/2009 10:09:51 PM
well this sucks....NC has the 2nd largest change in unemployment from 07-08, of 4%, only behind RIhttp://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/JOBLESSDATA08.html
1/29/2009 1:43:47 AM
Man, Elizabeth Dole sure did a great job
1/29/2009 5:18:09 AM
i don't like/dislike her, but it's not her fault
2/3/2009 10:07:02 AM
In exactly one week I'll be helping NC push for #1 on that chart!!
2/3/2009 11:37:18 AM
Socks...
2/4/2009 11:32:07 AM
Your equation sucks.100^(1+.03) = 114.8But yes, if something grows at a set percentage it is growing exponentially, not linearly.[Edited on February 4, 2009 at 12:24 PM. Reason : 2]
2/4/2009 12:22:59 PM
dear lordhttp://youtube.com/watch?v=x8hMJVXt09E
2/4/2009 1:56:06 PM
I just lost my job 5 times while watching that video... amazing
2/4/2009 1:57:59 PM
^^ i'm no fan of Pelosi at all, but that clip is clearly a slip of the tongue in the same way that Obama's "we've been to 58 states" was. He obviously meant to say "48 states" and Pelosi obviously meant to say 500 thousand instead of 500 million. It's true that 500,000 are losing their jobs each month, of course, it's not necessarily true that the passing a stimulus would immediately change that. on to other job and economy news....
2/9/2009 5:20:24 PM
The decline in the first chart is a little misleading as it does not take into account changes in the size of our workforce.Here is a similar, albeit more accurate, chart with percentages.
2/9/2009 10:15:10 PM
It doesn't look sooo terrible on the surface until you consider that the post .com boom job growth was the weakest post war. You'd expect if the job growth between recessions was weak that the losses wouldn't be so great as they are. It's data points like that which should serve as a real gauge for where we are headed. L shaped recession, here we come.
2/9/2009 10:21:15 PM
2/9/2009 11:36:23 PM
populations grow exponentially, in general, it only makes sense for the economy to grow at this rate...
2/9/2009 11:45:16 PM
2/10/2009 12:06:28 AM