From the informative and entertaining King Report:
There are two important stories in the Employment Report that are largely, if not totally, being ignored. Most importantly, wages increased only 0.1% (0.2% exp). Whatever jobs that are being created in this recovery have been largely in low paying gigs like leisure & hospitality, retailing, health & social services and government ( for the election in 2004).
Secondly, the CES Business Birth/Death Rate contributed 16k more jobs this Dec (78k vs. 62k last year). What evidence is there for 26% job growth in small businesses in Dec 2004? We see none. And anecdotal evidence, namely the past few months of economic data, shows an ebbing economy globally. Now the real story – The Chicago Tribune on Saturday noted that for the first 47 months of Bush’s reign, the US has lost a net of 122k jobs. If less than 122k jobs were reported on Friday, Bush would’ve been the first president since Herbert Hoover to have less jobs at the end of a term. If Hoover had the benefit of BLS chicanery, namely the Biz B/D Rate, he too like Bush, would’ve avoided job loss ignominy.
Bush’ job creation is even worse when one considers, as the Trib points out, that during Bush’s term the US population has grown by 12 million.
NY Times: "3.6 million American workers who ran out of unemployment insurance benefits last year, the most in at least three decades, said Isaac Shapiro, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities…As of November, about 1.8 million, or one in five, unemployed workers were jobless for more than six months, compared with 1.1 million when the recession officially ended in November 2001…Since the start of the recession in March 2001, the average length of unemployment has risen to 20 weeks from 13." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01…obless.html?oref=login&th
NY Times Magazine: "What makes China so troubling for American and other foreign companies is that the country is both a potential rival, with an alternative legal approach to intellectual property that limits their prospects in China and weakens their competitive strength globally, and a haven for pirates and counterfeiters." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01…FEIT.html?pagewanted=2&th
The Chicago Tribune ran a fascinating economic story in its "Arts & Entertainment" section on Sunday.
The article asserts that ticket fees for events have increased sharply and now account for as much as 47.5% of ticket prices. The Trib cogently, but ignorantly [of BLS consequences], notes that though fees are increasing sharply; the amount of service is declining sharply as people must use computers. Where is this accounted for in CPI? There should be a double whammy – higher costs and a negative hedonic adjustment. But we all know that there are only positive hedonic adjustments when it comes to CPI.
Earnings reporting season commences this week. Though there could be some nano-term positive reactions for bang-out earnings, overall the reactions should not be sanguine because The Street expects 2005 earnings to recede and inflation to increase. Ergo, disappointments in earnings and guidance will be punished; good news will have only an ephemeral effect…
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