Do you have stats on people out of the labor force?
4/8/2009 11:40:12 PM
do you mean U6 (part-time when would rather be fulltime, "discouraged" or "marginally attached" workers)? If so, those were includedthose graphs are from here - there are more data and graphs availablehttp://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2009/04/close-look-at-accelerating-rate-of.html
4/8/2009 11:47:56 PM
Ah, thanks. Sorry.
4/9/2009 1:55:49 AM
U6 is worthless because it did not exist before '94 and is therefore uncomparable with any real recession but 2001 which was the softest recession in U.S. history as I understand it. Using U3 it is about as high as it got in the '91 recession and still well below the '81 recession. We will need to wait for unemployment to start dropping before we can say how bad this recession was. And that it is still rising is not evident that it will continue to rise; afterall, in all previous recessions the turn around was abrupt.
4/9/2009 10:28:28 AM
Current Intrade OddsGM to announce before Dec. 31, 2009 it will file for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy: 74.3%Tim Geithner to depart as Secretary of the Treasury before June 30, 2009: 11.2%Advance GDP figure for Q1 2009 to be -4.0% or worse: 83%US GDP growth for Q2 of 2009 will be postive: 10.1%US GDP growth for Q3 of 2009 will be postive: 32%US GDP growth for Q4 of 2009 will be postive: 50%US GDP growth for Q1 of 2010 will be postive: 73%US Unemployment Rate Dec 2009 greater than 10.0%: 61%US Unemployment Rate Dec 2009 greater than 10.5%: 45%US Unemployment Rate Dec 2009 greater than 11%: 35%US Unemployment Rate Dec 2009 greater than 11.5%: 10%
4/9/2009 10:35:50 AM
We may not be able to accurately compare U6 numbers to previous recessions, but that doesn't mean it's "worthless". Just going by the numbers, U6 means that almost 1 out of 5 people are un or underemployed. Comparison or no, that's a pretty big deal
4/9/2009 10:37:58 AM
Recessions are usually big deals. I don't think any here would argue otherwise.
4/9/2009 10:39:56 AM
well, you, for one, have been arguing for months that this particular recession wasn't really a big deal at all.
4/9/2009 11:03:06 AM
You've argued in this very thread the exact opposite.
4/9/2009 11:03:30 AM
There is a difference between saying any recession is a big deal, all stop, and saying this recession is somehow special, a bigger deal than other recessions. The former I accept, the latter I reject as there is so far no justification.
4/9/2009 11:09:55 AM
so you still argue that this is a "business cycle recession" and not a failure of the entire financial system in general, which has much graver implications than a business-cycle recession where one or a handful of industries boom and bust, but the underlying financial system (which supports all industries) is still healthy.
4/9/2009 11:14:22 AM
The financial system has failed before. It failed rather spectacularly in the 80s and left the federal government owning millions of houses and billions of dollars in the hole after bailing out S&Ls. So, no, the current financial fiasco is not that different from other recession cycles.
4/9/2009 11:58:38 AM
http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node%2F3421
4/10/2009 1:41:30 AM
Well, according to Time Magazine, "More Quickly Than It Began, The Banking Crisis Is Over"http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1890560,00.htmlThat would make this banking crisis a tad shorter than the 1987 crisis.
4/10/2009 11:28:18 AM
since when do you get your economic news from Time?[Edited on April 10, 2009 at 11:41 AM. Reason : .]
4/10/2009 11:41:21 AM
^^Wells Fargo makes a profit in one quarter, so Time declares the whole crisis over? Even Cramer's news outlet isn't that bullish:
4/10/2009 12:24:48 PM
This is rather interesting. It is quite amazing how the whole world is so content to point the finger at the US with little evidence to show for it.
4/10/2009 9:11:31 PM
didn't read the whole thing, but this jumped out at me.....
4/10/2009 9:16:31 PM
^^Maybe but I think it's fair to say that bank failures made this the Great Recession we are currently experiencing versus a more normal "business cycle" recession.
4/11/2009 2:06:20 PM
CR does this once a week or so and I'm just blown away reading themhttp://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2009/04/another-house-price-round-trip-to-1990s.htmlWish I had some money to scoop some of these up.
4/13/2009 12:09:53 PM
4/14/2009 7:32:43 AM
what's one way for banks to book record profits this quarter? well, for one, they could change their reporting schedule for no apparent reason and simply don't report on a month that happened to have $1.3B in losseshttp://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/04/how-to-puff-up-earnings-goldman-sachs-style/
4/14/2009 4:06:27 PM
4/20/2009 11:55:48 PM
4/22/2009 10:49:44 PM
4/26/2009 2:27:50 PM
I'm not worried about the economy. Obama's team is on top of things. ZZZzzz. . . .
4/28/2009 4:25:58 AM
Welcome back, sir!
4/28/2009 5:29:26 AM
^ You know you missed me--SAY IT!!!1 I mean, type it. . . .
4/28/2009 5:33:44 AM
I seriously have missed him, TSB has gotten so boring
4/28/2009 7:47:30 AM
^ Thank you. And now this: The stimulus is not working!Despite Stimulus Funds, States to Cut More JobsBudget Shortfalls Prompt Mass Layoffs
5/14/2009 1:22:44 AM
You quoted something that says the stimulus wasn't big enough... how does that help your point?
5/14/2009 1:26:43 AM
^ Um. . .this is what I was referring to--you know, the part I posted:
5/14/2009 1:45:37 AM
Nothing you've quoted implies that the money spent did not limit lay offs. In fact, the article actually states that the money was not enough, implying that more would've been better. It seems apparent that this article does not help the case you're trying to make. I meant to thank you earlier, so let me do so publicly here. I was amused when you first created this thread, and again several months later. Now seeing you back here, defending (trying?) your perspective, I find more amusing still.
5/14/2009 2:38:14 AM
^ Um. . .thanks for sharing?I don't think I'm defending anything at this point. Will/can you defend the following?Bush Deficit vs. Obama Deficit in PicturesTwo wrongs don't make a right. And Obama's economic wrongs are way bigger than Bush's--yet some of you are saying it's still not enough. [Edited on May 14, 2009 at 2:50 AM. Reason : Really?!]
5/14/2009 2:49:38 AM
I do think it is curious as hell that he shows back up in this thread right as this rally is running out of steam.The Hooksaw Sell Indicator, patent it while you can.
5/14/2009 6:47:24 AM
good fucking lord....http://www.chartoftheday.com/20090515.htm
5/17/2009 1:53:10 PM
^^^ I had actually seen that and was considering posting it. I was looking at:http://business.theatlantic.com/2009/05/the_risk_of_debt.phpOne thing I found notable was:
5/17/2009 3:47:50 PM
it's also worth noting that the 2009 Budget (the largest deficit, by far, on the chart) is still Bush's budget. Obama's budgets don't officially start until 2010. All the budget charts are somewhat disingenuous, if not flat-out misleading. This chart, for example, doesn't specify which budgets are Bush's and which are Obama's, but it is certainly implied that the "Actual" section, through 2008, is Bush's and the rest is Obama's, and that's what most americans would think because, hey, it's 2009 and Obama is president, therefore the 2009 budget is his.
5/17/2009 3:57:43 PM
Absolutely untrue. Congress refused to send the 2009 budget to Bush because they knew he would veto it. As such, although 2009 had started three months earlier, it was Obama that signed into law the bulk of the federal budget for 2009. As such, since it was Obama's signature on $2.5 trillion of 2009's $3.4 trillion of spending, I blame Obama. As for the deficits leading up to 2009, I blame Bush and the democrats which ruled congress.
5/17/2009 6:34:43 PM
^^ And even if your position were true, Obama's deficits will create debt trillions of dollars larger than Bush's, according to both CBO and White House estimates. [Edited on May 18, 2009 at 3:17 AM. Reason : Here's one from OMB. ]
5/18/2009 3:16:36 AM
Just great. Credit Card Industry Aims to Profit From Sterling Payers
5/19/2009 5:38:46 AM
5/19/2009 6:48:10 AM
^
5/19/2009 7:43:39 AM
I read the entire thing, what point are you making?
5/19/2009 8:15:37 AM
^ I thought you were implying that the credit card companies weren't doing some of these things yet. I was simply indicating that they are doing them now. If I misunderstood, my mistake.
5/19/2009 8:52:23 AM
No, I meant that they will threaten to do those things to prevent the legislation from passing. But you have a point as it looks like they are going to do them either way, and probably have lobbyist talking it up at the same trying to get the added effect of the killed legislation if possible.
5/19/2009 8:53:58 AM
5/19/2009 9:24:02 AM
Evidence of what, them charging the same rates for credit card transactions?
5/19/2009 9:57:20 AM
Evidence for each of the claims in the quoted sentence.
5/19/2009 10:09:16 AM
you're asking for evidence that credit card companies actively seek ways to screw people?where have you been?
5/19/2009 10:21:45 AM