It is almost impossible for me to freshly describe the ongoing disconnect between what we see and hear coming out of the mouths of people in and around the Beltway Village and the facts on the ground for the rest of the country. I won’t say that they must be on drugs because I’ve used drugs and I never was as far away from reality as the Beltway Village Idiots Pundits, Politicians, and Courtiers. They just live inside a fantasy bubble. It might be acceptable if the decisions they make each day didn’t have such negative consequences for the rest of us.
The Initial Unemployment Claims report for last week came out today (Thursday April 28), and guess what? It surprised the economists. From Reuters:
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits jumped 25,000 to a seasonally adjusted 429,000, up from a slightly upwardly revised 404,000 the preceding week, the Labor Department said. Economists polled by Reuters were expecting claims to slip to 392,000 from the previously reported 403,000.
Of course, usually the surprise is the claims didn’t fall as much as expected but today the claims went in the totally opposite direction than the predictions. Yet some of them refuse to give up their pre-conceived notions as AP quotes a Deutsche Bank economist that it is just “technical factors.”
Well, those “technical factors” include the US economy growing at 1.8% for the first quarter of the year. From the NY Times:
American economic expansion slowed to a crawl in the first quarter, but economists are hopeful that the setback will be temporary. Total output grew at an annual rate of 1.8 percent from January through March, the Commerce Department said Thursday, after expanding at a 3.1 percent pace in the fourth quarter of 2010.
When the year began, economists expected a more robust growth rate of about 4 percent, only to be barraged by bad report after bad report. Turmoil in the Middle East led to higher oil prices, which had already been climbing because of increased demand in emerging markets like China. Housing sales dropped sharply. Winter blizzards closed businesses and delayed construction, causing investments in nonresidential structures like office buildings to fall 21.7 percent from the previous quarter. Imports, which are subtracted from gross domestic product, surged. Military spending sank.
There are all sorts of ready-made excuses for the economists as to why the slow growth, however there were two other stories in the news today that tell me far more about where the economy is today than any of the economic predictions.
First up is this report via CNN:
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Wal-Mart’s core shoppers are running out of money much faster than a year ago due to rising gasoline prices, and the retail giant is worried, CEO Mike Duke said Wednesday.
…snip…
Wal-Mart shoppers, many of whom live paycheck to paycheck, typically shop in bulk at the beginning of the month when their paychecks come in.
…snip…
Wal-Mart (WMT, Fortune 500), which averages 140 million shoppers weekly to its stores in the United States, is considered a barometer of the health of the consumer and the economy.
To that end, Duke said he’s not seeing signs of a recovery yet.
Then there’s this from Bloomberg:
McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), the world’s biggest restaurant chain, said it hired 24 percent more people than planned during an employment event this month.
McDonald’s and its franchisees hired 62,000 people in the U.S. after receiving more than one million applications, the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said today in an e-mailed statement. Previously, it said it planned to hire 50,000.
The April 19 national hiring day was the company’s first, said Danya Proud, a McDonald’s spokeswoman. She declined to disclose how many of the jobs were full- versus part-time. McDonald’s employed 400,000 workers worldwide at company-owned stores at the end of 2010, according to a company filing.
My bold. Think about that for a minute. Think about an economy where McDonald’s receives one million job applications for their proposed 50k hiring. Twenty applications per planned job. Even increasing their hires to 62k puts it at 16 applicants for each hire.
The Federal Reserve has as part of its mission:
conducting the nation’s monetary policy by influencing the monetary and credit conditions in the economy in pursuit of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates
Fed Chair Ben Bernanke held a press conference yesterday. When it came to the unemployed? Well, I’ll let David Dayen at FDL News make the point for me:
I bugged out of the Ben Bernanke press conference shortly after he answered the crucial question. The questions were generally terrible, many of them dealing with things where Bernanke has no role whatsoever – gas prices (though he never mentioned over-speculation), fiscal policy and the deficit – and not the biggest problem facing the country, the jobs crisis. But one reporter finally raised the issue. “What can do you to increase the pace of job creation, and why aren’t you doing it,” was essentially the meat of the question.
And Bernanke answered that, while he has been engaged in extraordinary efforts to aid the economy, he had to be concerned about inflation as well. So basically, the Fed is failing at one of their mandates (maximizing employment) because they’re worried about their other mandate (price stability)… which they are ALSO FAILING AT! There’s also no awareness that, if inflation rises unacceptably, you can deal with it at that time. Refusing to stop the human suffering of mass unemployment because of the possibility of an inflation rise that can be dealt with if it happens is just a giveaway that the inflation mandate matters overwhelmingly more than the employment mandate.
So instead of dealing with what is happening, Bernanke is more concerned with what might happen if the Fed helped fix what is happening.
To reinforce the concern of the Very Serious People, I will leave you with two links to today’s Washington Post. First up is Michael Gerson’s column:
The deficit debate, now fully engaged, is also an evaluation of political seriousness.
House Republican leaders have passed the test, supporting a politically risky budget that changes Medicare into a premium-support program and eventually returns federal spending to sustainable levels.
Gerson is matched in idiocy by this about lobbying for another corporate tax holiday:
As Washington politicians grapple with how to lower the federal deficit, a coalition of powerful corporations has a seemingly tantalizing offer: Give us a big tax break, and we’ll give you $50 billion or more in fresh revenue.
More than two dozen major companies and business groups — including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and technology giants Apple, Google and Microsoft — have joined together under the banner of the “Win America Campaign” to push for a one-time tax holiday on overseas profits.
$1Trillion dollars in untaxed profits sitting in tax havens and the corporations want to buy in for a nickel on the dollar. I wonder how many billions in taxes could be raised if the 25M to 30M long term un and underemployed in the US had decent jobs paying a living wage?
And because I can:
Cross posted from Just A Small Town Country Boy




49 Comments

Never saw this one DK . . . nice close with the Green Mac vid!
*G*
Rcc’d!
N may Teh Bernanke rot in the hell of his own making and take the rest of them with him.
Till it’s jobs first, they are sinking us all deeper n the Titanic.
Thanks Dakine,
that statement from Walmart really tells the story. As does the number of McJob applicants.
thanks, Rcc’d The relationship of jobs/wages to economic prosperity is going to come home to the MOTU only when their profits are affected so much even they see it.
Thanks Dakine, rec’d.
Here’s a link to a ten chart compilation in case you haven’t seen it yet.
http:/www.businessinsider.com/and-we-just-got-the-10th-sign-that-the-economy-is-slowing-down-2011-4
Also a good article by Henry Blodget yesterday 4/28/11 with Business Insider entitled “Don’t mean to be rude but the economy sucks”; but I couldn’t figure out a clean link.
As long as there are tax advantages for speculative activity earnings, the companies and wealthy individuals have no incentive to investing in risky manufacturing industries.
In a consumer economy, disabling the consumer will catch up with those who are in business to produce profits, eventually.
thanks Dakine ! rec.
“$1Trillion dollars in untaxed profits sitting in tax havens and the corporations want to buy in for a nickel on the dollar.”
- Firedogs – tomorrow’s Book Salon – Treasure Islands – Nick Shaxson – be there !
everything I’m reading about Shaxson’s book tells me the most cynical among us may find themselves shocked to learn the true reach and level of misery and havoc wrought
jesus, hosted by Yves Smith – damn !
what do you think of my blog:
http://my.firedoglake.com/marinara/2011/04/29/the-contempt-in-his-eyes-is-the-only-thing-you-need-to-know/
it’s about Politicians who are obviously captured working for private interests.
Remember when Politicians are serving the corporations, they obviously aren’t going to show initiative. Rather, they are going to focus on the demands of the corporations, and nothing else (even in a virtual emergency)
In regards to a comment above:
Blog whoring falls to new lows.
*shakeshishead*
LeSigh.
Great read DK, went thru it again . . . thanks.
Why call it the “Beltway.” Versailles would be more appropriate.
Thanks for the ongoing coverage, I always know if I miss something you’ll pick it up for me.
d
There is no recession in Washington DC, not in real estate, not in wages, not nowhere. A few people have even remarked on how extraordinarily different the economy of Washington DC is from the rest of the country. Unique. Of course, if you’re in charge of economic distribution, it could be arranged to work out that way. Ya think?
You are quite welcome. Although it’s a bit astounding that you miss anything!
Or a minimum of 16.129 per position, (1,000,000 * 62,000 = 16.12903), and let’s keep in mind, almost all of those jobs are part time and seasona. When the beltway celebrates McDonald’s hiring their usual summer help as sign of economic recovery, they are deeper into La La Land than Herbert Hoover was at the end of his term.
Great post, dakine.
Vichy would be even more appropriate.
Truly but by then the rest of us will be in very bad shape indeed.
Hey dk great as always! recommended YUP!
“Think about an economy where McDonald’s receives one million job applications for their proposed 50k hiring.”
It’s Barry’s economy now.
MAIN PAGED DK!
Wahoo!
*G*
WHEN is someone going to do a story about how these numbers cover only claims for benefits?
If you’re a recent college graduate, you can’t “claim” benefits, but you’re still unemployed. These folks [another whole wave of whom is coming in a few short weeks] aren’t anywhere in the “numbers,” but they are out there competing for jobs.
It has been for well over a year now but anybody who still blames Bush for the current economy, especially since the great rich tax cut capitulation, is a fool.
Not to mention those four million of us or so who have exhausted all benefits. We aren’t counted anymore at all. Everything is both hunky and dory, see?
I am I crazy or do some news services such as Associated press seem to be intently promoting the idea that things are a little bit bad, but getting better, such as the following headline in the Washington Post “Gas prices hurting consumers’ wallets, but job growth brightens outlook for rest of year”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/consumer_spending_and_incomes_both_rise_in_march_but_higher_energy_costs_eat_up_gains/2011/04/29/AFO9UwCF_story.html?wprss=rss_policy
There are all sorts of hidden un and underemployed. My “favorite” are the folks who are now “independent contractors” or “self employed”
All the college grads with their loans hanging over their heads are out there as well (as you note). I did touch on their plight a bit in this post from Wednesday
Assuming economists were telling the truth about the economy before the real estate implosion, I don’t see any chance of a recovery until and unless the real estate market is fixed. One economist after another said that growth was fueled by people using their homes as capital producers, rolling over their home equity loans and refinancing as prices escalated, and using the cash realized to buy stuff. When the real estate market crashed and burned, billions in equity evaporated–and continue to evaporate on a daily basis–eliminating the source of cash so many were using to buy all that stuff they wanted. With no available equity, nobody’s got cash to spend. And there won’t be any for a long, long time.
I haven’t seen anyone even mentioning the real estate market crash recently. The villagers don’t really seem to understand what’s happened out here in the hinterland. Not only is this having a devastating impact on retailers, but local governments that rely on property taxes–schools, parks, libraries, fire departments–are seeing their revenues beginning to crash.
That anyone thinks now is the time to cut federal spending is just remarkably stupid.
That’s a common tactic they have been using. If you check the AP article I linked in the post, they quote cheerleader economists trying to minimize the bad news. Same as the post i just linked to in the reply to mauimom. USA Today was cheerleading that there were more jobs for grads this year than last. Then noted that this year there are ‘only’ 21 applicants for every job instead of over 40 applicants per job.
Actually even inside the Capitol Beltway there is a recession on; it just isn’t affecting those living in Georgetown. The current D.C. unemployment rate for those living West of the Anacostia River is 2%. East of the river it is 25%.
There is a glut of office/retail space in this area that remains unleased. Near where I live, they built a 58,000 sq foot office/retail complex. It was completed in Spring of 2010. It has yet to find its’ first taker. Again, this is within the D.C. Beltway.
People are being tossed from defective escalators in the metro stations. At the Pentagon a trap door was left open at the top of one escalator and a woman fell in, cutting her face and hurting her knee. At the Pentagon no less. We have a glut of rental units in this area, but the prices are outside the range of most single individuals and a family of (4) doesn’t want to be smashed into 400 sq feet of space for $1900 a month, no utilites. People in the D.C. beltway are paying roughly 60% of their take-home pay on housing. We do not need more building, we need infrastructure programs and affordable housing; which would mean money into local coffers.
However, if you live near Georgetown/G.W. M-Street area, all this is news to you because you are picking up your soy latte at Dean & Deluca and heading over to The Palm for a power steak dinner with other members of your “ilk”!
This is a fearsome prospect, hopefully the pain the everyday consumer is experiencing will be enough of a spur for the MOTU to back off, maybe even turn rational
In the various agencies of the government, there is an increasing use of personnel, which means not just more work from those in place, but also reduced number of consumers spending disposable income. It is a mounting toll.
Left you a reply to your garden ?? down thread… It has been a shitty year for most gardens… sigh..
What’s on the front page at FDL right now:
Return of Union-Busting: Wisconsin Republicans May Vote Again, Can Petraeus Avoid Self-Promotion at CIA?, Goolsbee: Lower Federal Spending Caused Slowdown in GDP, The Party Line – April 29, 2011
And the Band Played On, Deficit Hysteria Aside, Economy Still Hard on Millions of Americans, Time for Another Rebrand, Conservatives: Tea Party Now Toxic at the Polls, Wisconsin: Elections Board Gets Go-Ahead to Consolidate Recalls on July 12, Time’s Mueller Story Reveals Troubling Details of US Approach to Domestic Terror Threats, Sanders Wants Crackdown on Wall Street Speculation on Oil Prices, Unemployment Tap Dance Shows Beltway Fantasy Land in Operation
Versus what’s on Daily Kos front page:
DK Elections Daily Digest: 4/29, Marc Thiessen: General Petraeus soft on torture, Yoo: President can order child’s testicles crushed, not contractor transparency, SB1070 hasn’t been kind to Arizona, Rep. Frank Guinta faces tough town hall crowd on Medicare, taxes, Donald Trump goes F-Bomb City in Las Vegas, NY-26: Jane Corwin (R) leads by just five in new poll, Bachmann backs up: Now vows to ‘keep our promise’ to current and future seniors, Obama, Alabama officials pledge aid for storm survivors, Rick Perry to President Obama: Screw Alabama, what about Texas?, Never mind the booing, Ryan says constituents ‘overwhelmingly supportive’ of budget, WaPo factchecker: GOP lawmakers Medicare claim ‘stretched’.
On the one hand you’ve got issues important to Americans regardless of party affiliation and on the other, you seem to have an entire day’s worth of conversation designed to deflect any possible criticism of Obama and the rest of the neoliberal Vichycrats.
Hmmm….
…just “technical factors.”
This is known as cognitive dissonance.
Shit I haven’t “Counted” since 02… scraping by is a way of life for us.. but so far we have… sure can’t for-see so we will just see..
The Federal Government classifies those folks as “small business” owners.
Take me for example. I worked for one company as a “consultant”. Had to pay my taxes quarterly and received a 1099 at the end of the year. I received no health benefits and was not having any state/federal taxes deducted; therefore the need to pay quarterly taxes.
I received an official questionnaire from the Feds that I was required to fill out as a “small business owner”. I was not a small business owner and therefore ignored the first request. I received another more insistent letter informing me that I could face penalties for not filling it out. Needless to say I did and gave them a piece of my mind in the process!
Therefore, the reported figures on the number of small business owners in this country is heavily inflated. It looks like we are still a country of entrepreneurs when what we are is merely a hired hand that can be let go at will, no legal recourse, no social safety net, and used in intentionally skewed federal data measurements which over-inflate the health and mobility of the American workforce!
I know a couple of couples in Arlington who are doing very well in businesses with government connections. Their respective neighborhoods are in good shape. The upper middle class in DC appears to be doing well.
Indeed! Why I stopped going there.. nothing but loyal cheerleaders…sickening no individual understanding of just WHAT is really happening in our country!
No integrity whatever. They’d have been nonstop on Bush and the Repugs if this was still their economy. I used to like Kos but I don’t like dishonest people.
“I don’t see any chance of a recovery until and unless the real estate market is fixed.”
Obama was told this at the beginning. There will be no recovery without a recovery in the housing market. The strategy of muddling through with obscenely high unemployment was a political decision made over one year ago. IMHO, it was a fatal decision.
“Independent contractor”? Loans hanging over heads? Recent graduate?
HI!!!
But the Fleetwood Mac track makes it all go down so much better.
There nothing that lowing wages to $1 per day that won’t fix this problem that they’re having. I’m sure then it would fit the compture model they made up of fake numbers for real people.
The McFundamentals of the economy are sound.
*hick*up*
It’s spring. There should be more work.
I have been house-hunting in both Northern (mainly for comparison value) and Southern CA, and I can tell ya that there’s a ton of empty real est out there and/or short sales/foreclosures that may have folks living in the house but aren’t paying anything towards a mortgage.
See loads of empty commercial real est in both areas, as well. See loads of empty houses that are real TRASH but still quite high-priced (guessing the banks are just hoping that some rube’ll buy it as a “fixer.”).
Not much new construction happening, which I think is the biggest issue bc that’s what provides jobs. But new homes & new commercial spaces aren’t needed with so much “inventory” on the market.
Those that are buying houses are looking more on the lower end for “deals,” which do exist for sure. But it’s kind of scary even to walk around my current pretty much “middle class” neighborhood and see a lot of empty homes – most without any signs out front but most empty for something like 4 months to 2 years.
I think it’s only going to worse. All over CA, there’s pressure to cut cut cut cut cut gov’t jobs of all kinds, including all those Unionized govt employees who “crashed the economy” (snark but that’s how it’s being presented).
I see far too many letters to the editor that are nasty, viscious and attacking – mostly *ranting* (can only be described this way) about *slashing* public service pensions and health benefits and jobs.
It seems like a form of insanity to me. I don’t know where it’s going to end up for us all.
Thanks for the post. It’s all very sad.
They are doing that by devaluing the dollar, so dollar-denominated commodities become more and more expensive…and conveniently enough the effects of this currency devaluation are excluded from inflation tracking because they’re not part of the “core.”
I haven’t visited the Big Orange in such a long long time, and I doubt I ever will again. You keep giving us updates on what’s going on there, and for me, it’s like: no thanks. Don’t need a bunch of Obot cheerleading.
I don’t like tribal politics at the best of times; it’s even more egregious at the worst of times.
Over the last decade, the lionshare of consumer spending has been due to the top 20%. The bottom half account for a surprisingly small portion of our consumer economy.
Also, I think our corporations aren’t too fussed about the consumer while there is perfectly good bailout money which they can acquire straight from the source.
Well, at least a large percent of Americans can see thru the ‘recovery’ smoke screen:
Most Americans say U.S. in recession despite data: poll
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/28/us-usa-economy-gallup-idUSTRE73R3WW20110428
That’s sorta good news.
Your so right about the claims issue. The way unemployment is calculated is itself a joke. So many people are out here unemployed but not being counted it’s absurd, but that’s the system isn’t it. The nos. are total BS and the Gov’t couldn’t care less.