American Economics Thread

Equation

Lieutenant General
Trump says noise from wind mill turbines causes cancer!

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This is what I felt about Trump.

facep4.jpg
 
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Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
I just saw Tim Ryan who's running for President being interviewed. He's angry that China dominates 40% of the electric car market when the US should be dominating. Problem is China is the largest market for electric vehicles in the world and doesn't have Chinese electric cars exported to the US so he's actually demanding that the US dominate the Chinese electric car market. I know these are the typical lies of US politicians intentionally mispresenting the facts trying to falsely accuse China of victimizing the US to get elected. Tim Ryan represent Ohio. He's a part of the US that rejects electric cars for politics and their masculinity. Don't blame China because Trump sees value in coal over any green technology.

You should hear some of the craziest stuff that was invented to blame Chinese.

For example, like the Chinese bought Lenovo from IBM and IBM should not have sold Lenovo to China so they can keep that giant PC firm under US control.
 
thought I might 'retweet'
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If the Fed had done its job properly, which it has not, the Stock Market would have been up 5000 to 10,000 additional points, and GDP would have been well over 4% instead of 3%...with almost no inflation. Quantitative tightening was a killer, should have done the exact opposite!
 

Nutrient

Junior Member
Registered Member
thought I might 'retweet'
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If the Fed had done its job properly, which it has not, the Stock Market would have been up 5000 to 10,000 additional points, and GDP would have been well over 4% instead of 3%...with almost no inflation. Quantitative tightening was a killer, should have done the exact opposite!

Too much Quantitative Easing would not have been good either.

In 2015, the U.S. dollar
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.
By 2017, the U.S. dollar
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. Just two years later.

That means the rest of the world is dropping the dollar, very quickly. The U.S.'s days as the issuer of the world's top reserve currency are numbered. In order to delay this for a little while, the Federal Reserve stopped printing money (quantitative easing).

So pick your poison. Quantitative easing will destroy the U.S. dollar's reserve currency status; it will be bad for the U.S. Quantitative tightening is also bad for the U.S.
 
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Dec 28, 2018
Yesterday at 4:32 PM
but later ...:
dj1.jpg


LOL a roller coaster, roughly six percent down and up during last week:

Dec 20 opened at 23195,
Dec 26 at one point was as low as 21730,
closed at 23139 Dec 27
and it's
26,612.54
Apr 24, 3:56 PM EDT ·


earlier today read it was approaching all time high, let me see ... "The
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highest closing record is 26,828.39, set on October 3, 2018."
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Too much Quantitative Easing would not have been good either.

In 2015, the U.S. dollar
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
.
By 2017, the U.S. dollar
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
. Just two years later.

That means the rest of the world is dropping the dollar, very quickly. The U.S.'s days as the issuer of the world's top reserve currency are numbered. In order to delay this for a little while, the Federal Reserve stopped printing money (quantitative easing).

So pick your poison. Quantitative easing will destroy the U.S. dollar's reserve currency status; it will be bad for the U.S. Quantitative tightening is also bad for the U.S.

Quantitative easing was the ultimate sacrifice of the public good to bail out big money special interests without holding those guilty of instigating the financial crisis accountable. They should be forever shamed.
 

pipaster

Junior Member
Registered Member
Estimate for Q1 annualized GDP growth at 3.2%. Considering the winter they had, and the partial government shutdown, quite spectacular growth, almost beyond comprehension. Especially with experts predicting closer to 2.2%, it seems most growth was in a better trade balance, and company stockpiling. With consumer spending only growing by 1.2%, this other growth must have been large?

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The US economy grew much faster than expected in the first quarter of the year, helped by a jump in exports and by firms building up stocks of goods.

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in the January-to-March period, well above analysts' forecasts.

The economy has accelerated since the previous quarter, when it grew at a pace of 2.2%.

However, some analysts warned growth had been boosted by one-off factors, and could slow in the months ahead.

The growth figures - which are subject to revision in the months ahead - appeared to dispel any fears of an economic slowdown.

Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross welcomed the data, saying: "The Trump economy has repeatedly defied the sceptics who predicted an economic downturn and has restored America's position in the world as a consistent source of economic growth."

Trade helped to boost growth in the first quarter, as exports rose while imports fell. Companies also built up inventories of goods at the fastest rate since the second quarter of 2015.

However, consumer spending, which drives about two-thirds of economic activity in the US, grew by only 1.2% in the first quarter, down from a rate of 2.5% previously.

The growth figure was quite a surprise and it certainly defuses some of the warnings about a possible recession in the US.

There were, however, some features of the figures that suggest the headline growth rate is a little flattering. The acceleration owed something to companies building up their stocks of goods. That is a process that won't go on indefinitely, not at the same rate.

There was also a contribution from government spending and from international trade. The last of these is striking, in the context of the increase in global trade tensions due to a significant extent to the more assertive policies pursued by the Trump administration. Will that be sustained?

Consumer spending is a traditional source of US economic strength. It did grow in this period, but more slowly than before. Spending on goods actually declined, although that was more than offset by services.

All that said, some observers point out that the first estimate for this quarter tends to be revised upwards. So we could yet end up with an even stronger figure.

_106608494_presentational_grey_line464-nc.png

Fed faces 'tricky summer'
Earlier this month,
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, claiming that the Fed had "really slowed us down" in terms of economic growth.

In March,
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- which currently stand between 2.25% and 2.5% - for the rest of 2019.

Ian Shepherson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the "strong" GDP report meant the Fed could have a "tricky summer".

"The problem for the Fed now... is that if growth continues at anything like this pace, the labour market will tighten much further this year, and the question of rate hikes will be back on the agenda".

However, Paul Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics, warned that there were "plenty of causes for concern" behind the headline growth figure.

As well as the boost from trade and inventories, he noted growth was also lifted by government spending on highways and roads.

"So taking out the over-sized boosts from net trade, inventories and highways investment, which will all be reversed in the coming quarters, growth was only around 1.0%," Mr Ashworth says.

"Under those circumstances, we continue to expect that overall growth will slow this year, forcing the Fed to begin cutting interest rates before year-end."
 
Jan 31, 2019
noted
Fed chair: 'The case for raising rates has weakened'
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now
Fed keeps interest rates steady, but signals potential rate cuts in 2019 as pressure mounts
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The Federal Reserve on Wednesday held rates steady but raised the prospect for two potential rates cuts this year, as policy makers continue to weigh the right time to act amid concerns over President Donald Trump's trade policies.
Jerome Powell, the president's choice to run the world's most influential central bank, is facing considerable pressure to keep the US economy steady. Concerns are intensifying that Trump's tariff strategy may end up
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.
The decision also comes
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, suggesting he might still be willing to try to demote the country's top central banker.
"I think the law is clear that I have a four-year term, and I fully intend to serve it." Powell said during a news conference on Wednesday.
Trump had told reporters that he would be watching "what he does" as the president left for his
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on Tuesday.
Powell has repeatedly defended the independence of the Fed while under fire by Trump, and has argued the central bank is insulated from day-to-day political pressure.
He declined to push back on the President's criticism over the Fed's interest rate policy when asked at Wednesday's press conference.
"I don't discuss elected officials publicly or privately, really," said Powell. Adding, the Fed prizes its independence, saying it has "served the country well."
A looming rate cut
The Fed voted to leave its benchmark rate hovering between 2.25% and 2.5% with only one objection by St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, marking the first dissent in Powell's chairmanship. Bullard had previously suggested a rate cut "may be warranted soon."
Fed officials are now split between whether to continue indefinitely holding rates level for the remainder of the year or to make at least one, if not two, potential rate cuts in the second half amid
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that have shown signs of damage to the US economy. Eight out of the 17 officials were in favor of keeping rates the same.
During his press conference, Powell noted the jobs market is healthy, although the Fed is concerned about a few recent weak reports. The Fed predicts unemployment will remain low this year and next.
Consumer spending, which makes up about 70% of the US economy, remains strong. Yet Powell noted that "the risk of less favorable outcomes has risen" and uncertainty has "clearly" risen since the Fed's last meeting in May.
For the last several months, Powell has preached patience when it comes to rate-setting policy. But with increased uncertainty over on-again, off-again
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, the world's two largest economies, and the threat of tariffs on nearly all remaining Chinese goods, the Fed is now beginning to signal a more a nimble approach.
Powell noted business debt has increased and manufacturing has weakened, in part because of trade policy.
Analysts anticipated the Fed would punt on a rate cut this week until there was greater clarity of how trade talks between the United States and China would unfold. Trump announced on Tuesday he and Chinese President Xi Jinping would
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later this month at the Group of 20 leaders summit in Osaka, Japan, and negotiators would resume talks.
Officials in their statement noted that risks to growth had increased amid "uncertainties," and reaffirmed that they would move as needed to continue the US economy's expansion.
"In light of these uncertainties and muted inflation pressures, the committee will closely monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook and will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion," the Federal Open Market Committee said in its statement.
The expected shift echoed a similar message made by Powell weeks earlier in Chicago when he spelled out to investors that the Fed was prepared to respond if the Trump administration's trade strategy ends up threatening the American economy.
"We are closely monitoring the implications of these developments for the US economic outlook and, as always, we will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion," Powell said speaking at a Fed conference.
Those comments have helped to fuel expectations that the Fed may cut rates at least once, if not more, before the end of the year due to the trade war.
Seven out of the 17 participants on the Fed's policy-making board now anticipate that two rate cuts may be necessary this year with one member estimating a single rate cut may be sufficient to keep the economy humming.
June's updated forecast is a significant downward shift since the projections were last updated in March.
At the time, the Fed had effectively put a pause on lifting interest rates with 11 out of 17 participants in favor of being patient until the central bank had a better handle on where the economy is going for the rest of the year.
 

Anlsvrthng

Captain
Registered Member
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Wealth Should Trickle Up, Not Down
Income inequality in the United States hampers growth and forces up debt. In advanced economies in which investment is not constrained by scarce savings, high levels of income inequality lead automatically to either more unemployment or more debt. Such inequality undermines not only the health of the economy, but eventually also the rich.
 
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