this is the US government's figures. the real un-rigged figures show an even steeper graph since government is underestimating unemployment according to some.
Scariest Job Chart Ever
http://dont-tread-on.me/wow-the-scariest-job-chart-ever

Sirji,Neshant wrote:Its not true. Prices are not falling except on real estate and some luxury items which were (and still are) grossly over priced to begin with.Prices on everything from clothes to coffee to cat food are dropping, some faster than they have in half a century.
I doubt the smart money is going to be out buying houses. With the loss of the leverage that became possible post 1992, it is pretty much guaranteed that prices have not hit bottom, and that they will vary with inflation even if interest rates don't rise and the baby boom echo starts buying houses in 10 years time.g.sarkar wrote:So, no one can afford to buy houses at this time, though this would be the prudent thing to do.
I did not get a raise this year either. There is no deflation other than in purchasing power.At my work I have 3 days of furlough, that is about $1000 less take home pay.
very early next year. by that logic, recovery will be in full swing by end of 2010 or early 2011.
Ready for next wave of downtrend and prepare stay in that stagnated period for 2-3 years. Tough items ahead for India. Without demand picking up in US and Europe, China needs to some diversion to cool rageing tempers of its Chinese, hope GOI prepares in advance to thwart any mischief by Chinese strongly.“Treasury may have created unrealistic expectations about the institutions’ condition and their ability to increase lending,” he wrote. “Treasury and the TARP program lost credibility when lending at those institutions did not in fact increase and when subsequent events -- the further assistance needed by Citigroup and Bank of America being the most significant examples -- demonstrated that at least some of those institutions were not in fact healthy.”
There's nothing more absurd than claiming recovery when you cannot point out *what* industry will drive job creation.none of the post WW-II recoveries from recession were caused by some "new" industry as you put it. the business cycle itself picked up and that is how recovery happened.
I'm afraid there's no convincing a person who believes its the cart pushing the horse rather than the horse pulling the cart. Credit loosening, tightning..etc has no bearing on the emergence of a new productive industry. You may as well have cited his bowel movements in the 80s as having set the stage for the 90s NASDAQ boom.the boom of the 90's was a direct result of the credit loosening that started in the Reagan era. the internet and IT boom was itself an offshoot of the Reagan Revolution
IOW, the ever increasing growth rates are unsustainable.Our oceans have been the victims of a giant Ponzi scheme, waged with Bernie Madoff–like callousness by the world’s fisheries. Beginning in the 1950s, as their operations became increasingly industrialized--with onboard refrigeration, acoustic fish-finders, and, later, GPS--they first depleted stocks of cod, hake, flounder, sole, and halibut in the Northern Hemisphere. As those stocks disappeared, the fleets moved southward, to the coasts of developing nations and, ultimately, all the way to the shores of Antarctica, searching for icefishes and rockcods, and, more recently, for small, shrimplike krill. As the bounty of coastal waters dropped, fisheries moved further offshore, to deeper waters.
And, finally, as the larger fish began to disappear, boats began to catch fish that were smaller and uglier--fish never before considered fit for human consumption. Many were renamed so that they could be marketed: The suspicious slimehead became the delicious orange roughy, while the worrisome Patagonian toothfish became the wholesome Chilean seabass.
Yup, much like "Its not a bad loan", merely a permanently nonperforming one that can be 'marked to market' on the books to show full expectation of recovery anyway
Others, like the homely hoki, were cut up so they could be sold sight-unseen as fish sticks and filets in fast-food restaurants and the frozen-food aisle.{A la securitization and the CDO epidemic, perhaps?}
No kament required, IMVHO.The scheme was carried out by nothing less than a fishing-industrial complex--an alliance of corporate fishing fleets, lobbyists, parliamentary representatives, and fisheries economists. By hiding behind the romantic image of the small-scale, independent fisherman, they secured political influence and government subsidies far in excess of what would be expected, given their minuscule contribution to the GDP of advanced economies--in the United States, even less than that of the hair salon industry. In Japan, for example, huge, vertically integrated conglomerates, such as Taiyo or the better-known Mitsubishi, lobby their friends in the Japanese Fisheries Agency and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to help them gain access to the few remaining plentiful stocks of tuna, like those in the waters surrounding South Pacific countries. Beginning in the early 1980s, the United States, which had not traditionally been much of a fishing country, began heavily subsidizing U.S. fleets, producing its own fishing-industrial complex, dominated by large processors and retail chains. Today, governments provide nearly $30 billion in subsidies each year--about one-third of the value of the global catch--that keep fisheries going, even when they have overexploited their resource base. As a result, there are between two and four times as many boats as the annual catch requires, and yet, the funds to “build capacity” keep coming.
Sustainability is the foundation of ethics. Welcome world, to the Indic view of life, the universe and everything.The jig, however, is nearly up. In 1950, the newly constituted Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations estimated that, globally, we were catching about 20 million metric tons of fish (cod, mackerel, tuna, etc.) and invertebrates (lobster, squid, clams, etc.). That catch peaked at 90 million tons per year in the late 1980s, and it has been declining ever since. Much like Madoff’s infamous operation, which required a constant influx of new investments to generate “revenue” for past investors, the global fishing-industrial complex has required a constant influx of new stocks to continue operation.
Instead of restricting its catches so that fish can reproduce and maintain their populations, the industry has simply fished until a stock is depleted and then moved on to new or deeper waters, and to smaller and stranger fish. And, just as a Ponzi scheme will collapse once the pool of potential investors has been drained, so too will the fishing industry collapse as the oceans are drained of life.
Read it all.Unfortunately, it is not just the future of the fishing industry that is at stake, but also the continued health of the world’s largest ecosystem.
Why heck Japan is participating in these discussions. IS Japan sensing inevitable collapse of dollar and positioning to place yen in basket of currencies.Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work on the scheme, which will mean that oil will no longer be priced in dollars," it claimed.
For years, economists have speculated about how long oil would continue to be traded in dollars. Critics argue that the current system is flawed; oil importers are forced to buy dollars to pay for their fuel, while exporters are left with billions of dollars which they often hold in reserve or reinvest in the US economy. The result, they say, is that the dollar's position as the global reserve currency is reinforced. Thus, the US economy is supported as any devaluation would cause damage across the world. Most of China's $2tn (£1.24tn) of foreign currency reserves are in dollars, for example.
Well, the popular press is doing its bit to reinforce the notion that deflation == price levels falling. Not exactly.The U.S. faces the possibility of deflation for the first time since the Eisenhower administration, a threat that may prompt the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates near zero through next year.
Executives at Kroger Co., the largest U.S. supermarket chain, blamed deflation for a 7 percent drop in earnings in the second quarter, while falling prices for food, gasoline, and electronics left August sales unchanged at Costco Wholesale Corp. A sustained price drop might set off a chain reaction in which lower profits force employers to pare wages and payrolls. That would erode consumer demand, exacerbating wage cuts and firings.
“Deflation is definitely a threat right now,” Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, 66, a professor at Columbia University in New York, said in a Sept. 22 interview. “The combination of the deflation threat and the sluggish recovery should keep the Fed on hold for quite a while.”
And on and on it goes. Depressing reading, really.Yet California is currently cutting healthcare, slashing the "Healthy Families" programme that helped an estimated one million of its poorest children. Los Angeles now has a poverty rate of 20%. Other cities across the state, such as Fresno and Modesto, have jobless rates that rival Detroit's. In order to pass its state budget, California's government has had to agree to a deal that cuts billions of dollars from education and sacks 60,000 state employees. Some teachers have launched a hunger strike in protest. California's education system has become so poor so quickly that it is now effectively failing its future workforce.
The percentage of 19-year-olds at college in the state dropped from 43% to 30% between 1996 and 2004, one of the highest falls ever recorded for any developed world economy. California's schools are ranked 47th out of 50 in the nation. Its government-issued bonds have been ranked just above "junk". Some of the state's leading intellectuals believe this collapse is a disaster that will harm Californians for years to come. "It will take a while for this self-destructive behaviour to do its worst damage," says Robert Hass, a professor at Berkeley and a former US poet laureate, whose work has often been suffused with the imagery of the Californian way of life.
Now, incredibly, California, which has been a natural target for immigration throughout its history, is losing people. Between 2004 and 2008, half a million residents upped sticks and headed elsewhere. By 2010, California could lose a congressman because its population will have fallen so much – an astonishing prospect for a state that is currently the biggest single political entity in America.
America is the leader and it is not going down so easily. Britain after its Empire collapsed has still managed to be in the limelight for so long. Gurus here watch how the '08-'09 economic meltdown is shaping the short, mid and long term scenario. A giant economy and country like USA can not be just ignored. It has 300+ million people, it definitely is going to thrive. Unless scientific breakthroughs are made, the current lifestyle would have to be lowered to keep it sustainable. Can we put the genies China and India back into their bottles? I don't think so. Definitely these countries impact the global lifestyle for the good or bad.kumarn wrote:Have we convinced ourselves of impending doom and looking at only that part of the data set which bolsters our point of view? Just wondering...
A little perspective here.SwamyG wrote:What let to the meltdown, and what are the lessons is the perspective.kumarn wrote:Have we convinced ourselves of impending doom and looking at only that part of the data set which bolsters our point of view? Just wondering...
Even the mighty stalwarts having access to more data and information swayed. Assuming you have less data than them, it was no biggie. We all sailed in the boat.Lemme readily admit moi as a khanomic grad student was persuasively swayed too.
The real reason the dollar will lose its role as the world's reserve currency is because US markets, which until recently provided up to 25 percent of global demand, are in sharp decline. Export-dependent nations--like Japan, China, Germany, South Korea--already see the handwriting on the wall. US consumers are buried under a mountain of debt, which means that their spending-spree won't resume anytime soon. On top of that, unemployment is soaring, personal wealth is falling, savings are rising, and Washington's anti-labor bias assures that wages will continue to stagnate for the foreseeable future. Thus, the American middle class will no longer be the driving force behind global consumption/demand that it was before the crisis. Once consumers are less able to buy new Toyota Prius's or load up on the latest China-made widgets at Walmart, there will be less incentive for foreign governments and central banks to stockpile greenbacks or trade exclusively in dollars.
As private industry veers away from the dollar, governments, investors and central banks will follow. The soft tyranny of dollar dominance will erode and parity between currencies and governments will grow. This will be create better opportunities for consensus on issues of mutual interest. One nation will no longer be able to dictate international policy.
So-called "dollar hegemony" has added greatly to the gross imbalance of power in the world today. It has put global decision-making in the hands of a handful of Washington warlords whose narrow vision never extends beyond the material interests of themselves and their constituents. As the dollar weakens and consumer demand declines, the United States will be forced to curtail its wars and adjust its behavior to conform to international standards. Either that, or be banished into the political wilderness.
So, what exactly is the downside?
Superpower status rests on the flimsy foundation of the dollar, and the dollar is beginning to crack. Fisk is right to this extent; big changes are on the way. Only not just yet.
Japanese banks’ bad loans won’t be driven higher by a proposed moratorium on debt payments by struggling small companies, said Financial Services Minister Shizuka Kamei.
Lenders won’t have to classify loans encompassed by the plan as non-performing, Kamei, 72, said in an interview yesterday at his office in Tokyo. That means they won’t be forced to boost provisions when borrowers postpone repayments of interest or principal, he said. At the same time, Kamei vowed to push banks to extend more credit to small businesses after bankruptcies hit a six-year high in Japan.
“We’re going to get financial institutions to provide these firms with more loans,” said Kamei. “Banks won’t have to treat debt on which they provide a moratorium as bad.”
The moratorium, postponing repayment of principal and interest, will be extended to individuals as well as firms Kamei said. It will aim at giving relief to companies with about 100 million yen ($1.1 million) or less in capital.
“As long as I’m financial services minister, I’m not going to leave small companies in the lurch unable to get loans,” Kamei said. “If a bank takes that approach, I’ll hit them with a business improvement order.”
Of course, the inscrutable Cheenis are yet to issue their denial perhaps but issue one they will.Big oil producing nations denied on Tuesday a British newspaper report that Gulf Arab states were in secret talks with Russia, China, Japan and France to replace the U.S. dollar with a basket of currencies in trading oil.
It said the proposal was for trade in crude oil to move over nine years to a basket of currencies including the Japanese yen, the Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new, unified currency planned for nations in the Gulf Co-operation Council, which includes Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
But top officials of Saudia Arabia and Russia, speaking on the sidelines of International Monetary Fund meetings in Istanbul, denied there were such talks.
Asked by reporters about the newspaper story, Saudi Arabia's central bank chief Muhammad al-Jasser said: "Absolutely incorrect." He repeated the same response when asked whether Saudi Arabia was in such talks.
Russia's deputy finance minister Dmitry Pankin said: "We did not discuss this at all."
Algerian Finance Minister Karim Djoudi told Reuters: "Oil producing countries need to stabilise revenues but...I don't see a need for oil trade to be denominated differently.
Analysts said that while individual countries would find it relatively easy to stop using the dollar in settling their oil trades, as Iran has already done, replacing the currency in which oil is priced would require a massive effort.
And apart from the strong political links between Gulf nations and the United States, the lack of convertibility for many Gulf currencies and the yuan tops the list of practical hurdles to making such a shift. Saudi Arabia and some other Gulf states now peg their currencies to the dollar.
Who is saying that? Where is the data to support that?As the dollar weakens
The dollar decline is probably not going to be on the list of reasons if and when US curtails its wars.United States will be forced to curtail its wars
Anyway, moi 2 cents.It is this shift in China and other parts of rising Asia and Latin America that threatens dollar domination, not the pricing of oil contracts. The markets were rattled yesterday by reports – since denied – that China, France, Japan, Russia, and Gulf states were plotting to replace the Greenback as the currency for commodity sales, but it makes little difference whether crude is sold in dollars, euros, or Venetian Ducats.
What matters is where OPEC oil producers and rising export powers choose to invest their surpluses. If they cease to rotate this wealth into US Treasuries, mortgage bonds, and other US assets, the dollar must weaken over time.
"Everybody in the world is massively overweight the US dollar," said David Bloom, currency chief at HSBC. "As they invest a little here and little there in other currencies, or gold, it slowly erodes the dollar. It is like sterling after World War One. Everybody can see it's happening."
{See, now, that scenario is much better argued than Fiskian nonsense. A gradual erosion of USD influence is quite likely indeed. Even so, yrs will pass before the effective borrowing costs for the US rise enough to alter geopolitical power structures.}
"In the US they have near zero rates, external deficits, and public debt sky-rocketing to 100pc of GDP, and on top of that they are printing money. It is the perfect storm for the dollar," he said.
"The dollar rallied last year because we had a global liquidity crisis, but we think the rules have changed and that it will be very different this time [if there is another market sell-off]" he said.
The self-correcting mechanism in the global currency system has been jammed until now because China and other Asian powers have been holding down their currencies to promote exports. The Gulf oil states are mostly pegged to the dollar, for different reasons.
This strategy has become untenable.
{Untenable? Already? Wait, you ain't seen nothing yet. All that printing and all is yet to ignite inflation coz the tinder is soaking wet. As long as USD value relative to produced goods and services in the US remains roughly even keel - and thats what bind yields seem to suggest - the dollah is ok.}
It is causing them to import a US monetary policy that is too loose for their economies and likely to fuel unstable bubbles as the global economy recovers.
The rupee? The great gora UKstani press actually deigned it acceptable to name the rupee as a regional anchor?!? Be still,my beating heart! To their credit, they have yet to specify whether it is the yindian, packee or nepali rupee they allude to. Besides, it could well be that they are talking about the 1920s only - when the rupee was quite strong actually and traded all along the IOR.The new order may look like the 1920s, with four or five global currencies as regional anchors – the yuan, rupee, euro, real – and the dollar first among equals but not hegemon. The US will be better for it.
I share your opinion about much of what you wrote. From the unemployment rate to protectionism to dependance on government payouts, you are right on the money. I think the hustlers from the financial 'industry' were smart to rush to the trough first and clean it out before all the old folks, medicare, unions, government workers, military..etc. showed up to collect their dues or ask for tax reductions, funding..etc.I expect the jobless rate to continue spiking till it goes to roughly a sixth of the workforce (16%+) in official terms before protectionism kicks in. There is no jobs driver in the immediate future, so hope will be to protect jobs by raising import barriers and other such means. The green legislation planned will come in handy here to spin protectionism as some kinda green measure, maybe.
It is a scary scenario. The gains made in world trade, living standards etc in the past few decades are all seriously threatened in large parts of the world.
Hari Seldon wrote: Hey, here's some entertainment value also from the very last para in the article.The rupee? The great gora UKstani press actually deigned it acceptable to name the rupee as a regional anchor?!? Be still,my beating heart! To their credit, they have yet to specify whether it is the yindian, packee or nepali rupee they allude to. Besides, it could well be that they are talking about the 1920s only - when the rupee was quite strong actually and traded all along the IOR.The new order may look like the 1920s, with four or five global currencies as regional anchors – the yuan, rupee, euro, real – and the dollar first among equals but not hegemon. The US will be better for it.
True that everybody's looking to their own interests and all. But transitioning away from the USD cannot happen so fast. And unkil is no fool, has gamed scenarios in which USD is under attack by any group of actors - nations, institutions, non-state actors etc - and I believe has measures in place to trip any such move.SwamyG wrote:Hari:
Why would you believe the noises Russia or the Oil countries making? I don't think anybody is going to openly say "Death to the Dollar". All machinations are going to be subtle onlee no?
link“In this period of steep job losses, the birth/death model didn’t work as well as it usually does,” Manning said in an interview. “To the extent that there was an overstatement in the birth/death model, that is likely to still be there.”
The model added about 184,000 jobs to the payroll total last quarter compared with a 135,000 increase in the same period in 2008, before the financial crisis deepened with the collapse of Lehman Brothers Inc.
“This birth/death model is still assuming that we are getting new jobs from new-business creations,” David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates Inc. in Toronto, said in an interview.
‘Alice in Wonderland’
“These additions are coming somewhere from ‘Alice in Wonderland,’” he said, referring to the novel by Lewis Carroll detailing the adventures of a girl that fell down a rabbit hole into a fantasy world.
“Even though the current data is bad, the numbers are actually even worse,” Rosenberg said.
Wells Fargo’s Silvia says the birth/death calculation isn’t the only thing that’s broken as many companies are also discarding their business models.
Companies “really have diminished their willingness to hire labor for any production level,” Silvia said. “It’s really a strategic change,” where companies will be keeping fewer employees for any particular level of sales, in good times and bad, he said."
Might the US dollar blow up? Yes it might. But so could the RMB if China floated it, and so could the British pound. No one seems to see the crisis brewing in Japan with a huge demographic problem, a shrinking population, falling exports, and no way to pay back its national debt.
There is seldom a mention of the problems in European banks who foolishly lent money to the Baltic States in Euros or Swiss Francs and now those Baltic country currencies have collapsed and the loans cannot be paid back. European banks also lent to Latin America and those loans are also suspect. Arguably, European banks are in worse shape than US banks, but no one talks about it, at least in the US.
Spain has unemployment approaching 20% yet must suffer through the same interest rate policy as Germany. Seldom does one hear about this either.
Certainly the UK is a complete basket case with its banks on government life support. Iceland has already blown up, who is next?
Most are not aware of the problems in China, Japan, or Europe. However, the problems in the US are universally well understood. Indeed all eyes are on the dollar and everyone is talking about deficits, monetary printing, and especially unfunded liabilities even though the latter is tomorrow's problem, not today's.
Latvia and to a lesser extent Estonia and Lithuania had a massive and unsustainable current account deficit. That means they bought more from the rest of the world than they sold (just like America buys far more from China et al than they sell). The current account deficits (relative to GDP) was however much bigger in Latvia.
In a floating exchange rate regime this would usually be remedied by the currency falling dramatically, increasing the competitiveness of exports (and increasing the price of imports). The market provides a solution. With America this can’t happen because the Chinese fix their currency against the US dollar. In the Baltic States the currency is fixed against the Euro.
Normally to fix the exchange rate a central banker needs to buy the currency that is tending weaker. They buy it and remove it from circulation. In so doing the reduce the money supply in the weaker currency causing interest rates to rise and a mild monetary deflation (increasing the competitiveness of local industry versus foreign competition) and hence over time remedying the current account deficit.
Unfortunately this monetary deflation causes a recession in the country with the naturally weaker currency. Ultimately that makes fixed rates unpopular in countries with chronic relative economic under-performance – because the populace doesn’t like more or less continuous mild recessions…
Now there is one exception…And that is if somebody cheaply finances your current account deficit ad-infinitum. Then you can have the nice strong currency and spend it and not have any domestic price pressure. Unfortunately you also wind up owing your foreign benefactors just way too much money.
The party has to end. And it can end quite sharply when the foreign benefactor becomes less willing to lend to you.
Ok, that sometimes happens even to decent places. where's the pakiness you ask?Foreign benefactors have just put the choke collar on Latvia. The government was unable to roll over its debt this week.
Dass where.Sweden, in other words, finds itself a major actor, along with the EU and the IMF, in negotiating a rescue package that extends new loans only if austerity measures are implemented.
But Latvia does not appear to be ready to accede to Sweden’s demands. The immediate cause for concern is that Latvia will simultaneously devalue its currency and provide a mechanism for its consumers to partially default on mortgages held by foreign banks.