by: Daniel Becker
Ok some more information to bolster my
position that my flower shop being down this year another 4.5%
compared to last year (at least the decline is leveling off) is not
the results of government debt or too much taxation or banks not
lending or unions... nope, my shop is off because of one thing: Lack
of income in the hands of the many and nothing to date has been done to change that.
Or I should say, not cutting it for
anyone who earns a penny because someone else had an extra penny to
spend beyond their non-discretionary expenditures. That is, they are
at the point of autonomous consumption, but not at the point of
offsetting income earned from their cognitive or physical labor with
that earned from money. That means we're talking about the bottom 90%
of the income earning population. (The top 10% own 82% of the
stock.)
Two nice charts from the NY Fed bank
The first shows just how much of a dive
spending has taken. Considering we're a "consumption economy",
I don't think this bodes well for us. The second shows how lacking
in recovery such spending is compared to prior recession.
I don't know about you, but I don't
care how much money we pump into the economy at the top, if it
doesn't get in the hands the bottom 90% of the income earners, there
will be no recovery. It does not matter if the Fed's are pumping it
in or the Government is doing it via tax reductions because both
methods are not putting the majority of the money in the hands of the
many. The Fed article notes that this discretionary spending is
"services". It is 30% of all personal consumption
expenditures (PCE). Non-discretionary is 34% of PCE, that leaves 36%
somewhere in the middle? They state PCE is 70% of all output. So,
30% of 70% is 21% of all output? Using $14.7trillion means about
3.09 trillion has taken a 7% hit of $216 billion! ( I readily accept
any math corrections in comments)
The author states:
Because consumption accounts for about 70 percent of output, this in turn raises some concern about the future strength of the recovery.
That's an understatement! He hedges some more: Also, households may remain wary about their employment and income prospects, suggesting that they may have lowered their future income expectations.
Really? "May" is the word
one wants to use here?
A Mr. Roche is more direct:
The real weakness in this recovery is
rooted in the fact that consumer balance sheets are so mangled that
they're spending primarily on non-discretionary items and saving
the rest of their incomes to pay down debts. This is important to
understand because policy must be geared in such a way that it does
not further hinder the household balance sheet. And therein lies the
problem with a policy such as QE2. Anything that can potentially
cause cost push inflation will only further weaken the household
sector and detract from any possible recovery. In the case of QE2 I
think we saw the increased speculation contribute directly to rising
commodity prices which ultimately squeezed consumers further and led
to the current soft spot in the economy.
BINGO!
Let's not stop there. From Mr.
Weisenthal Under "Scariest Job's Chart Ever" we get this one on the duration of
unemployment.
Which brings me to my posting from
4/2008: The longest Recession Ever
I noted in this post that it took 20
months from the Bush 2 recession for the peak of what I call Person
Weeks Unemployed (a multiple of the number of people out and the
number of weeks out). I also noted that Reagan with back to back
recessions did not see the peak until 30 months past the first
recession. Almost 3 full years! He also double the quotient.
I ended with:
Thus, the peak of a recession is in the eye of the beholder. If you're a person earning money from labor, a recession these days can last a very long time. This data would suggest that what we are seeing in the Spencer post is not a decreased risk but a lull before the storm. One other thing. It appears the Republicans fail again. As a group they have the longest turn-around to seeing a reduction in lost labor.
There you have it. You want to fix the economy? Don't follow the conservative ideology. The Republicans win
in delaying recoveries. Yet, here we are with a "Democratic"
president using the very language, words, framing of the group that
is proven to not know how to create jobs and thus get money in the
hands of the many in the shortest amount of time. Some say the
Republicans are doing it this time with intention. I doubt that,
though it is a meme that would make them seem to be the ultimate
chess players.
Yes, I WANT MORE SPENDING!
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