
"Good News and Bad News" by Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com on flickr
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Well, here we go again. As usual, the past couple of weeks there have been a few articles on how the economy really isn’t THAT bad. In fact, that was a large part of the title of this article from McClatchy while USA Today offered up this from a Maria Bartiromo interview with the head of AIG, Robert Benosche (with a McCainesque “There’s a core of strength to the economy”). However once again, the reality on the ground rears up to refute the cheerleaders. Today’s (Thursday, August 18) Initial Unemployment Claims report for last week is out and the numbers are back over the dreaded 400k line once again (via Reuters):
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 408,000, the Labor Department said.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims rising to 400,000. The prior week’s figure was revised up to 399,000 from the previously reported 395,000.
Given that the trend the last few weeks has been for an upwards revision of the previous week’s numbers, I am not at all surprised at the upward revision from 395K initially reported to the 399K (although since I did not write a post on last week’s report, I can’t claim to have officially predicted the revision.)
Last Thursday, CNN had this article showing the lost jobs holes each state has to crawl out of to regain their pre-recession jobs numbers, especially when the new job seekers and residents for each state are factored in. Meanwhile, we got to ‘enjoy’ President Obama’s photo op Midwest bus tour this week (not to be confused with Cincinnati’s own Midwestern Hayride). Even though the lack of jobs has been an economic crisis for months years now, the elected officials, when they see fit to do something seem most intent on doing the wrong things. Marcy Wheeler has taken a few whacks at the stupidity of “free trade,” deficit reduction clueslessness, and the White House propensity for rhetoric over accomplishment, but I have to chime in with a big WTF over this NY Times article from this past Sunday:
Mr. Obama’s senior adviser, David Plouffe, and his chief of staff, William M. Daley, want him to maintain a pragmatic strategy of appealing to independent voters by advocating ideas that can pass Congress, even if they may not have much economic impact. These include free trade agreements and improved patent protections for inventors.
With 14M unemployed and 25M to 30M un and underemployed (and all the college grads unable to find work from ’09, ’10, and ’11 not included in the these figures – nor are the “self employed independent contractors”). With all these people looking for decent jobs at living wages, the last thing we need is phony battles and photo-ops that do absolutely nothing to help the millions of people in need today. Today, not after the President speaks in September or after the Congressional Super Committee recommends destroying Social Security and Medicare in order to save them while refusing to raise taxes on the top 1% (so much for everything being “on the table”).
I’m going to end this today with a couple of articles from the past week that aren’t really related directly yet do seem to explain so much about where we are in the world today. First up is this one from last Wednesday at MSNBC:
Psychologist and social scientist Dacher Keltner says the rich really are different, and not in a good way: Their life experience makes them less empathetic, less altruistic, and generally more selfish.
In fact, he says, the philosophical battle over economics, taxes, debt ceilings and defaults that are now roiling the stock market is partly rooted in an upper class “ideology of self-interest.”
This contrasts with this article from CNN from yesterday about how nice guys earn less:
Leo Durocher was right: Nice guys finish last.
Or at least they earn less, according to a new study.
“‘Niceness’ — in the form of agreeableness — does not appear to pay,” the authors conclude starkly.
There are upsides to being nice in the office, such as being better liked by co-workers, the authors say, pointing to a raft of earlier studies.
But the bottom line, according to four studies they conducted, is that “agreeableness is negatively related to income and earnings.”
In other words, nice guys earn less.
As I say, the two articles are not directly related but I do see them as not that far off. I’ve always tried to be a nice guy in my work life, even when my job in Software Quality Assurance lends itself to being a PITA. I guess I’d rather be a nice guy and be able to sleep at night than to be rich and uncaring of others. Oh well.
And because I can:
Cross posted from Just A Small Town Country Boy



40 Comments

And for years -until now- I thought it was ‘trying time’. *G*
From an Olbermann interview yesterday, apparently Gene Sperling in the WH has a different idea than David Plouffe and William M. Daley, namely, come out strong with a jobs bill like Jan Schakowsky’s and dare the Repubs to not pass it and then use that for re-election purposes.
All I know is that if jobs were really important to Obama, the U.S. public wouldn’t have to wait until September to hear his ‘plan’.
A classic from back in the day – and I fully intended the subtle pun involved as well
There. He was being too nice.
It’s not so much mean as blind; that MBA frame of mind (as Matt Damon pointed out) sees working people as lazy and shiftless, and business as the savior. It cannot see that without consumers, i.e., working people, business is not functioning.
Well ,it sure isn’t here:
Wells Fargo to start a $3 monthly debit-card fee in October
“The bank said Wednesday that customers in Georgia, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon and Washington will begin paying the “activity” fee if they make any payments, purchases or transactions with a personal or business debit card, check card or ATM card. It is in addition to the regular monthly service fee.”
It’s sad to be resigned to watch the train heading off the tracks (although one could argue it’s off the tracks and now heading for the cliffs).
But that’s what I am – resigned.
O duped me personally big time. And yet all the evidence was there if I had opened my eyes.
500mil raised first time. Most from banks and corporations.
Telecom immunity.
Geithner, Summers, ie. the very people responsible for the crisis/scam (gross incompetence can take you to the top).
Daley, Immelt, …
Like I said, resigned.
BTW, WPA and CCA were both EXECUTIVE FING ORDERS.
If O was so inclined, he could literally pull out his pen and have them done in a few pen strokes. But we all know that won’t happen. Surprise, surprise.
So is Obama going to give us a “Let them eat lobster” address from the Vineyard?
Wait a minute, I just went to the CNN website showing the job holes, I see TX has one of the biggest holes (never mind the comment I could make about Perry and A-Hole LOL). How can that be? I thought TX under the guidance of Gov Perry was a big job creator. Yeah, right. If you believe that I have a bridge to sell you.
Excellent comment!!
Could we get some editing tools here @ myFDL? Sure would make it easier to fix our html errors.
Amen to that! Would be nice to be able to edit.
I have to wonder what tea leaves those that insist we have no reason to fear another recession are reading. Borders closing:3000 jobs gone. Cisco cutting 6500 jobs. Blackberry cutting 3000 jobs,
etc, etc. For almost a week every single day during the “don’t worry be happy” news cycle I read about another employer shedding employees. That definitely does not bode well for the economy on the whole.
I’m trying to fugure out whether I should rejoice or be worried. My state actually had a surplus for the fiscal year- we’ve got a GOP governor though which makes me worry about accounting tricks.
Obama needs to get rid of Piffle and Dilly and get some REAL people to advise him. Probably wouldn’t meet his academic standards though.
I’m pleased to report that my kid, a May 2010 college grad, today got a JOB.
Granted, it’s only part-time, and granted it’s on the opposite coast, but it’s in his field, and the entire family is delighted.
Of course he wasn’t counted before [recent college grad who'd never worked full-time], and he won’t be counted now, but it counts with us.
That’s good news, Mauimom. It’s a start and I’m sure that he feels good about it.
Obama’s on vacation cause he’s out to pasture.
job well done
he’s like Roy Fitzgerald (“Taken for a Ride”)
The billionaires are buying the swoons–pennies on the
dollar, but rest assured the corruption will leave
a wasteland.
The trickiest part of it all: Axelrod.
Half-aware / half-denial / (adds to 150%:
half needs to believe?)
with 350 buk wine like his good buddyRyan….hell they prolly all drink it
Vulture Banks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssl5yb7FewA&feature=youtu.be
Congrats to the kiddo. Mine is working to save money for college. He likes what he is doing but the pay is not great and he struggles to get the hours he needs to put the money away.
It’s happy and sad at the same time to see so much potential stagnating.
Congressional Super Committee recommends destroying Social Security and Medicare in order to save them while refusing to raise taxes on the top 1% (so much for everything being “on the table”).
Austerity in a recession makes it worse. Obama is a believer in Chicago School. As long as we have that economics school addressing the recovery we are had.
The notion that the stock market is the economy is bullshit. Wall streeters and banksters just cash out the economy. Freshwater economics including privatizing public assests brought the collapse of many South American economies. We are fighting reagonomics and we will stay in a recession as long as the people at the power levers move in that direction.
Naomi Klein made that clear. Krugman as well. Clinton deregulation allowed the banksters to destroy the economy and Paulsen, Bush II and Obama shifted their losses to us,
The good news is that households are reducing their debt.
There have been a few people pointing out that the so-called Texas miracle on jobs isn’t all that much of a miracle
Congrats! I know how u feel about him being on the opposite coast. My son a 2010 grad also just got a full-time job ( in his field) in Calif. and moved there a week ago. My wife and I are happy for him, but sad that he had to move so far from all of us. Thank God, for Skype, cell phs., email and Facebook. Still its not the same as seeing him at the family dinner table once in a while. I have to admit saying good-bye to him at the airport last week hurt.
Good for the kid. And the mom as well.
The bad news is there also losing their houses @ a record clip. Good-bye American Middle Class, hello Potterville.
I heard analysis today about how much worse this banking crisis is/has been than the Savings & Loan debacle…much, much worse. Yet, way less, almost no, prosecutions/investigations etc…..in part b/c a blind eye & no attention, and also b/c staff has been so reduced. What a sinful, shameful mess.
Just Wow! Can it get uglier.. you bet.
we live in grotesque times,when Wall St.also caused the food crisis in Africa,where i dont KNOW how many children will die
when i was growing up WE HELPED these people…i cant stomach much more newz
well hell…the SEC is shredding the evidence!!
I thought it was funny that the only people in the USA willing to walk out on an abusive, low paying job are foreign guest workers:
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/foreign-students-walk-off-hershey-factory-job-protest-214310205.html
Of course, they can go back home.
how many BILLIONS ayear does Hershey make……disgusting
Yes, the savings rate has gone up from 0% to 5% because of uncertainty about the future, but that is bad for the economy (which in turn has its benefits for the environment etc).
Yea…maybe it’s a good time to support the good guys and boycott Hershey…I should take off some of these pounds anyway.
I have friends who were in bankruptcy court today. Haven’t heard what happened, but I doubt it was fun for them.
This next generation is screwed.
My son is finishing up college at home at a local school(about 5 classes to go) and he’s going part-time and looking for a job since May and there is just nothing here.
He went into Arbys today and was told they aren’t hiring. They weren’t even accepting applications. Temp agencies have been useless(if you don’t have experience in something they don’t even really want you and don’t call.
It’s horrible–and the longer he grows his unemployment gap the tougher it will be.
I have this nightmare of trying to support my son and daughter when I’m eighty with a meager pension(if it is still there) and social security. There pressure on families is tremendous.
I mean–what does this generation do? They can’t get their lives started.
Meanwhile Nero–er, I mean Obama…fiddles while Rome burns.
We couldn’t have asked for a bigger disaster as President.
I know – slightly – Bob Benosche – worked for him. I respect his clear eyed judgment except I wish he had had the courage to fire his incompetent Chief Investment Officer at the MET – but he had just been made CEO at the time. Once had lunch and had him show me his kids photo’s from camp (13 years ago).
I would listen to him when he says the lack of Obama/Treasury regulations/work effort under Dodd-Frank is killing lending – the refusal to hire into Treasury to get folks that would write those regulations – austerity you know and Goldman veto on all regulatory hires – is killing lending.
“Naomi Klein made that clear. Krugman as well. Clinton deregulation allowed the banksters to destroy”
Since Krugman said the opposite, the question is why post the lie?