ComradeKayAdams Posted August 3, 2020 Posted August 3, 2020 On 7/26/2020 at 1:54 PM, ALF said: I won't believe that unless GG and Real Kay Adams agree with you. https://www.macrotrends.net/countries/USA/united-states/gdp-growth-rate It technically depends on what B-Man is referring to when he says “Obama’s policies.” There are Obama’s first-100-days Keynesian crisis escape policies (~$800 billion ARRA, Fed Reserve manipulations of interest rates/monetary supply, etc.) which all credible economists agree most definitely helped (but ended up being not nearly enough, in my opinion), and then Obama’s general post-crisis neoliberal economic policies that defined his last 7 years in office. I assume B-Man is referring to the latter, in which case my roundabout answer is “yes, B-Man is correct.” It's widely agreed upon that the Great Recession lasted 6 economic quarters from January 2008-June 2009. We’re using the mainstream definition of a recession here as at least two consecutive quarters with a decline in GDP. Important side notes: Obama should have done WAY more in early 2009. Way tighter regulation of Wall Street, actual criminal prosecutions of bankers, more oversight of the big business bailouts and the real estate industry, bottom-up stimulus support for Americans, and way more federal protections for homeowners. These early missteps, in addition to 7+ years of neoliberalism, are what truncated the recovery even though I give Obama credit for doing the bare minimum to clean up what was largely Bush’s mess and stabilize the economy. These economic shortcomings are what set the stage for the populist political uprising of 2016, which continue today. The Great Recession “recovery” is also an excellent lesson in the shortcomings of popular singular economic metrics like GDP, which do nothing to tell the story of how blacks, Latinos, Millenials, and whites without college degrees have fared overall during the past 12 years. On 7/26/2020 at 5:01 PM, 3rdnlng said: B-Man is correct. We came out of the recession in early 2009 but especially considering how deep the recession was we never had anything other than an anemic recovery, for 8 years. 8 promised "summers of recovery" that amounted to nothing more than typical Obama empty promises. 100% in agreement here, but I have a comparative opinion of Trumponomics that is not so flattering for President Trump, either. I take Obama’s last 12 quarters and Trump’s first 12 quarters when making this economic comparison because that keeps the analysis the furthest removed from the Great Recession and Covid-19. Using standard economic sources (NBER, BEA, BLS), I rate Trump as better on consumer confidence, about the same as Obama with unemployment decline rate and stock market growth rate and net job growth and cost-of-living-adjusted wages/income and GDP (Trump originally over-promised quarterly 5% but never got much above 3%), and worse with import/export trade balance and budget deficits/national debt (but like I said earlier, I don’t get worked up over this one like deficit hawks do). On 7/26/2020 at 7:04 PM, Koko78 said: Yeah, but on the bright side, many of his buddies became rich under his porkulus bills, getting full funding for the 'shovel ready jobs' that didn't exist. In “defense” of Obama, we’ve seen our fair share of crony capitalism (or rather, socialism?) throughout the tenures of Bush (such as fall 2008 TARP), Trump (such as 2017 TCJA and CARES), Clinton, and most who have been in Congress. I have to look over HEROES again and check out the HEALS Act proposals, but I’m sure there’s egregious pork in them too. Yes, I’m a deeply cynical person! On 7/28/2020 at 8:58 AM, Tiberius said: The GOP stimulus plan cuts the money for the regular people and pumps up the deduction for three martini lunches. The useful idiots on the right worship their corporate masters https://thehill.com/policy/finance/509210-kudlow-gop-plan-will-include-increased-business-deductions-for-meals-and Sure, but then again we already know about the GOP’s cult-like devotion to supply-side economic ideology. And amusingly enough, the one HEALS pandemic remedy McConnell is advocating the hardest for is the corporate coronavirus liability protection (the right call, though, to be clear…but amusing nonetheless). What’s far more interesting to me is how the Democrats are responding in the ongoing HEALS negotiations. Especially the obsequious clown car known as the Progressive Caucus (Bernie, the Squad, Khanna, Porter, Meng, Jayapal, etc.). We’ll see if Pelosi, Schumer, and the Dems are more interested in helping the American people or in playing partisan theatrical roles as Trump contrarians and GOP obstructionists. My central thesis and PPP raison d’etre: America is actually controlled by a one-party corporate oligarchy, with two flavors depending on your tastes for personal/social freedom issues. The oligarchy takes advantage of economic and foreign policy crises to increase their wealth and power. They couldn’t care less if small businesses fail and people lose their homes during this pandemic because then they can buy ‘em all up at discount prices in 2021. We shall see… So far I’ve heard that at least the $1200 stimulus won’t be a point of contention, but that there’s been virtually zero Dem movement on the following: foreclosure/eviction moratorium, fed aid to state and local governments that will otherwise need to cut payroll, a payroll tax that could help workers and small businesses, and Covid-19/general health care relief for the recently unemployed. I don’t think the Democrats have been pushing hard for an approximate $600+ weekly unemployment benefit extension, either. In my non-expert opinion, they should be doing so because it has likely been boosting consumer spending all summer and I bet also keeping many working class families afloat (the first time making living wages for some?!). From a macroeconomic perspective, the value of this extension would far outweigh the enablement of a small percentage of lazy people from going back to work (not to mention the easy political points to be scored with the Dems’ constituencies!). I’m assuming the job applicant to job opening ratio is currently uncomfortably high in most sectors of the economy, although I honestly haven’t seen a full July numbers report on weekly new unemployment claims, furloughs, layoffs, permanent job losses, and new job creation to say so with any certainty. This is among the most serious crises our country has ever faced and one that economists have never quite seen before, so I will continue to preach the importance of both political parties erring on the side of caution and going full Keynesian on historically tried-and-true recession recovery policy. On 7/30/2020 at 9:10 AM, SoTier said: I don't think that this was unexpected, and I expect that the third quarter, July through September, will likely to be as bad or even worse as areas with high coronavirus rates now struggle to contain community spread and Covid-19 spreads to new areas like the Upper South and Midwest. Agreed. This quarterly GDP number can’t really tell us much beyond the fact that an unprecedented nation-wide shutdown of the economy during a historic pandemic caused an unprecedented drop in economic activity. Well…duh. The 2020 Q3 number will be much more meaningful and will give us a much better idea of where exactly the economy may be headed. HEALS might buy us some more time, but my best guess is that the poop hits the economic fan in 2020 Q3. An economic depression could even be declared as early as 2020 Q4, depending on the unemployment rate. Seems like talk of a v-shaped recovery has disappeared? Is reality sadly sinking in for a lot of people? On 7/30/2020 at 9:47 AM, SoTier said: I doubt it. I think the GOP is a prisoner of its own ideology, much as Herbert Hoover was a prisoner of his own ideology back in 1932 which made it impossible for him to effectively respond to the 1929 stock market crash. That’s a good historical analogy. In poor Mr. Hoover’s defense, everyone back then had so much less economic data to study and learn from, compared to what we have now. The true prisoners of the modern-day GOP’s economic ideology are its populist coalition of economic nationalists, particularly the sub-$60k median household income Rep voters who have been led to believe that the wealth has been trickling down. The economic libertarians are the ones who control the GOP and will continue to do so after self-aggrandizing faux populist hero, Donald Trump, is gone. There’s no reason for professional and managerial GOP types to question the 40-year-old edifice of an economic philosophy designed to work magnificently for them, so any ideological challenge will have to come from the GOP working class. The problem here is that any and all economic woes will easily be blamed on Covid-19 and/or Joe Biden and/or even Trump’s personal foibles, so we should expect a bare minimum of another 2 presidential election cycles before an internal GOP working class revolt occurs…if ever. More likely, this GOP voting bloc will just skip on over to the Dems, whose own internal working class revolt could begin as early as 2022…um…if ever?? On 7/31/2020 at 5:22 PM, GG said: Sounds like you fully support opening up the economy to get us out of the recession. No problem, so long as fully opening up the economy ASAP is not thought of as a panacea for the recession. As Covid-19 goes, so go economic activity levels. Until there’s a vaccine or until herd immunity is somehow reached, we’re stuck with a limited set of solutions: modified partial reopenings in many sectors of the economy, more government-issued economic stimuli, and the usual health and safety practices (social distancing, face masks, hand sanitizers). Economic uncertainty is our new reality for at least the rest of 2020. On 7/31/2020 at 7:51 PM, Buffalo_Gal said: Why are they lying about the 32% drop? That would be a yearly rate (assuming Q2 numbers for 4 quarters which cannot happen in 2020 since Q1 was not a drop). It is not a Q2 number. Unfortunately they’re not lying. Annual rates are the traditional way GDP quarterly reports are given in the US. Misleading? Yes, since the more tangible number is about a 10% total macroeconomic contraction from 2020 Q1 to 2020 Q2. Intentionally misleading? Possibly. Bigger numbers are scarier than smaller numbers and can be used to promote agendas. But there’s no need for us to kid ourselves about the state of the economy: this GDP drop was historically awful. 2020 Q1 dropped at an annual rate of 5%, 2020 Q2 dropped at an annual rate of 33%, and so now we’re in an official recession. 1 1
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted August 3, 2020 Posted August 3, 2020 8 minutes ago, RealKayAdams said: . My central thesis and PPP raison d’etre: America is actually controlled by a one-party corporate oligarchy, with two flavors depending on your tastes for personal/social freedom issues. The oligarchy takes advantage of economic and foreign policy crises to increase their wealth and power. They couldn’t care less if small businesses fail and people lose their homes during this pandemic because then they can buy ‘em all up at discount prices in 2021. We shall see… Seems like they did a lot to help small businesses and have been for years, both parties. Both parties here in US both support big corporations, and that';s ok. Corporations are the gooses laying golden eggs, so of course you protect them, with Dems wanting more restrictions on them.
3rdnlng Posted August 3, 2020 Posted August 3, 2020 (edited) @RealKayAdams "100% in agreement here, but I have a comparative opinion of Trumponomics that is not so flattering for President Trump, either. I take Obama’s last 12 quarters and Trump’s first 12 quarters when making this economic comparison because that keeps the analysis the furthest removed from the Great Recession and Covid-19. Using standard economic sources (NBER, BEA, BLS), I rate Trump as better on consumer confidence, about the same as Obama with unemployment decline rate and stock market growth rate and net job growth and cost-of-living-adjusted wages/income and GDP (Trump originally over-promised quarterly 5% but never got much above 3%), and worse with import/export trade balance and budget deficits/national debt (but like I said earlier, I don’t get worked up over this one like deficit hawks do)." I think you have discounted the way improvements tend to get harder to attain the closer one gets to the best scenario. Let's say that 100 is the goal. It's pretty easy to go from 0 to 50 and fairly easy to go from 50 to 75 and so on. When trying to go from 95 to 100 it is generally quite difficult. Trump was operating in the 95-100 range in the stock market, growth rate and unemployment rate. Comparing Obama's statistics to Trump's on a straight line basis is just wrong. Look at it this way: it's a lot easier for a new football coach to take a team that was 2-14 to an 8-8 record than it is for him to take a team that was 8-8 to a 14-2 record. Edited August 3, 2020 by 3rdnlng
Buffalo_Gal Posted August 3, 2020 Posted August 3, 2020 5 hours ago, RealKayAdams said: Unfortunately they’re not lying. Annual rates are the traditional way GDP quarterly reports are given in the US. Misleading? Yes, since the more tangible number is about a 10% total macroeconomic contraction from 2020 Q1 to 2020 Q2. Intentionally misleading? Possibly. Bigger numbers are scarier than smaller numbers and can be used to promote agendas. But there’s no need for us to kid ourselves about the state of the economy: this GDP drop was historically awful. 2020 Q1 dropped at an annual rate of 5%, 2020 Q2 dropped at an annual rate of 33%, and so now we’re in an official recession. Q1 forecast an annual decrease of 4.8%, Q2 an annual rate of 32.9%. These are not what happened in that particular quarter. It gets very skewed because they are annualizing the rate based upon a quarterly rate (well, plus some compounding). Now, is the Q2 number good? Hell no. But it is not -32.9% in the quarter (as was tweeted) and we are unlikely to see that rate for a whole year (an annual). California alone being fully open would help tremendously... which means it ain't gonna happen until November 4th.
Buffalo_Gal Posted August 3, 2020 Posted August 3, 2020 Some positive news: ISM Manufacturing Index (PMI) Beats Forecast in July, Continuing Expansion Cycle The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) Manufacturing Index (PMI) came in stronger than expected at 54.2% in July, up from 52.6% in June. This reading indicates an overall expansion in the economy for the third straight month after one month of contraction due to disruptive efforts to mitigate the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19). </snip> The reading also indicates manufacturing sector growth continued for the second straight month after three prior months of COVID-19-related disruptions. </snip> Demand is growing as is evident by the strong gain in the New Orders Index at 61.5%. That represents an increase of 5.1 from the June reading of 56.4%. New orders are being supported by the New Export Orders Index re-entering expansion. The ISM Manufacturing Index (PMI) has now exceeded pre-pandemic levels. It hasn’t been as high since April 2019. The rate of increase for the PMI is a level not seen since August 1980. </snip> 1
3rdnlng Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 If Jonathan Seagull gets a stimulus check how likely will it be for him to get a mail-in ballot sent to him?
TBBills Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 Just now, 3rdnlng said: If Jonathan Seagull gets a stimulus check how likely will it be for him to get a mail-in ballot sent to him? Those are shoes republicans buy.
B-Man Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 5 hours ago, TBBills said: Those are shoes republicans buy. No. Seagulls are obviously democrats......... 1
Buffalo_Gal Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 Initial jobless claims Actual: 1,186K (1,186,000) Forecast 1,415K (1,415,000) 2 1
BillStime Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 This thread is a joke - just like the Trump economy
B-Man Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 UNEMPLOYMENT AND CORONAVIRUS: Weekly Jobless Claims Fall to Pandemic Low.
SoCal Deek Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 1 hour ago, BillStime said: This thread is a joke - just like the Trump economy Let me see if I have this right....you DON'T like the President? 1
IDBillzFan Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 7 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said: Let me see if I have this right....you DON'T like the President? I think you can put BIllstime down as a "maybe" for his Trump vote. 1
Trump_is_Mentally_fit Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 On 8/3/2020 at 5:34 PM, BillStime said: 20 straight weeks of over a million new unemployed, sad.
BillStime Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 Always lookin to distract - it is the Trumpian way!
HillaryClinton Posted August 6, 2020 Posted August 6, 2020 24 minutes ago, BillStime said: Always lookin to distract - it is the Trumpian way! Are you a junkie? 1 1
B-Man Posted August 7, 2020 Posted August 7, 2020 I HAD MISSED THIS STORY: US manufacturing soars to a 15-month high. Weird that it didn’t get more press. 4 1
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