March 5, 2009

One Economic Bright Spot - Used Car Repair Shops

Used car repair services would be considered an inferior good or service, where as incomes fall, demand increases. So, this actually is not a positive sign for the economy, or GM and Ford. But business is good for repair shops, as people fix up their old cars, rather than buy new. Read more here.

Gun Control Articles

From Economist John Lott here and here.

And here is a very good article, on a college professor calling the police after a students gives a presentation claiming guns reduce crime.

The Latest Blue-Chip Penny Stocks

Here’s a short list of only the highest quality, bluest of blue chip, penny stocks:

  • AIG (39 cents)
  • Citigroup (98 cents)
  • Fannie Mae (39 cents)
  • Freddie (39 cents)
  • Unisys (37 cents)

Now, for the not-quite-penny stocks:

  • Ford ($1.83)
  • GM ($1.83)
  • Las Vegas Sands ($1.97)
  • MGM ($1.99)
  • Bank of America ($3.15)
  • Wells Fargo ($7.95)
  • New York Times ($4.00)
  • News Corp ($6.15)
  • GE ($6.75)
HT: The Big Picture

And after my students have studied personal finance, hopefully they know more about stocks than The Pres.


Freakonomics Article on the Death Penalty... and more.

See Freakonomics article, with several additional links here.

Also here you can find an article from economist and my Facebook friend John Lott.

A Couple Economics Students Got Game

February 26, 2009

Live Blogging From The SCSU Winter Institute Economic Outlook Presentations

5:04 - Several panelists, including Tom Stinson, MN State Economist, are unable to attend due to the weather. It looks like the weather tonight will be as gloomy as the economic outlook for 2009. Still, and excellent panel of Economists.

5:10 - Remarks from the SCSU President: Yada Yada

5:15 - Rich MacDonald, Macro Prof at SCSU is speaking

5:19 - Unemployment expected to hit 9% by end of 2009 - Ouch...and I should note that this outlook "could deteriorate very rapidly"

5:25 - MacDonald asks "When will this thing (recession) end? He says if you ask 10 different economists, you will get 10 different answers. Either way, 2009 will be a rough year."

5:28 - Just to point out how economic forecasts can differ greatly, in January 2008, people predicted the U.E. rate would be 5.2% as of January 2009. Yeah, they were only off by over 2 million jobs, and the current U.E. rate is 7.6%.

5:30 - At least by 2010 should be better, (or check previous post at 5:28 to see how accurate predictions on the economy are).

5:32 - The AP syllabus and the McConnell text state that there are 3 tools of monetary policy... and MacDonald says now there are 11. So we will study 3 in class this year.

5:39 - Big banks created this financial crisis, and small banks who managed their businesses well are affected very much affected by the mistakes of the biggies.

5:50 - SCSU Prof and blogger King Banaian is now at the mic. Already cracking jokes -- about what he said last year and how wrong he was. See 5:25 above for how accurate forecasts are.

5:55 - St. Cloud has the worst economy since 1989, and King adds "it will get much worse"

6:02 - Minnesota went into a recession in February, 2008.

6:09 - The credit crisis has hit St. Cloud, just like pretty much everywhere else in the world. The average family in the St. Cloud area has seen their net worth go down over 30%. No wonder consumption (the biggest component of GDP) has fallen here and eslewhere.

6:13 - "It is raining outside for us economically" says King.

6:14 - While the Stimulus package will increase Aggregate Demand, citizens are very worried about the huge deficits, and 1.75 Trillion in 2009. So people may not spend and save, conteracting the fiscal stimulus goals... they know someone has to pay for this debt, a day of reckoning will come... and I see their point.

6:20 - Rocky and Bullwinkel are on the last slide

6:21 - Alright. I am out the reception, where the food is not free, but of no financial cost to me.

Law of Demand At Work: Chinese Scoop Up SoCal Foreclosurers



This video is a great example of market correcting forces. A demand curve tells us when the price of a product decreases, the quantity demand increases. While housing prices, especially in California, have fallen dramatically, eventually the price decreases will attract buyers in the US... and in China

The Crash of 2008: Causes and The Aftermath

Here is a great article I heard about at my economics conference today at SCSU. This may help my regular economics class students with their paper regarding the housing crisis.

The economist I am listening to today, Rich MacDonald, from SCSU, is on the Minnesota State Board of Economists, and has a quite dire prediction for the US economy in 2009. In his eyes, the recession will last until at least 2010.

Here is another description about the Credit Crisis, a powerpoint in PDF format.

February 8, 2009

Value of Education

According to the BLS, there now over an 8% difference between employment rates of people who have not finished high school (12%) vs. college grads (3.8%).

February 5, 2009

More on "Buy American" Proposals

Paul Krugman, Princeton economist and Nobel Prize winner has previously written about trade wars. Unfortunately, he claims that a trade war is one where no one can win. Krugman claims that a trade war is one where both countries use their ammunition to shoot themselves in the foot, with the lower standards of living than inevitably result from decline in trade. To put it another way, British Prime Minister recently said that "protectionism protects nobody, least of all the poor."

In todays Wall Street Journal, Princeton Economist Burton Malkiel, writes about the negative, unintended consequences that a trade war would have.

Malkiel writes: "This Buy American momentum is bad economics, and by threatening to destabilize trade and capital flows, it risks turning a global recession into a 1930s-style depression. Asked about Buy American on Tuesday, President Barack Obama told Fox News that "we can't send a protectionist message." He said on ABC News that he doesn't want anything in the stimulus bill that is "going to trigger a trade war." He's right.

Suppose that we did not allow free trade between the 50 American states. Citizens like me in New Jersey would be far worse off if we could not buy pineapples from Hawaii, wine and vegetables from California, wheat from Kansas, and oil from Texas and Louisiana while we sell pharmaceuticals to the rest of the country. The specialization that trade makes possible allows all of us to live better.

The situation is the same with respect to world trade. Both we and the Chinese are better off if we can import inexpensive clothing from China and sell them large-scale computers and data storage equipment.

To be sure, such trade does not make everyone better off, and that is why free trade is often a tough sell, especially during times of hardship.

If I am a textile worker whose job is lost because Chinese imports have caused my factory to close, I feel the pain far more acutely than consumers feel the benefits of cheap clothing. The pain tends to be localized while the benefits are spread broadly. No one person's benefit can compare with the loss felt by the textile worker. But the total benefits do exceed the costs. And competitive markets have spurred the innovation revolution that has made the U.S. the economic powerhouse that it is.

The solution for the displaced worker is job retraining and adjustment assistance, and to improve the safety net available to displaced workers during the transition period. We also need to revamp our educational system so that it prepares workers for the jobs that are available today -- and imparts the flexible skills that make our citizens ready for the future jobs that we cannot even imagine."

February 3, 2009

Smoot Hawley II? Say It Ain't So.

For those who remember their history, it was the Smoot - Hawley Tariff act that led to a dramatic decline in global trade during the Great Depression in the 1930's (See picture above). Most economists believe that this misguided policy put the "Great" in the Great Depression. In fact, a recession is a time to increase commitment to trade. Unfortunately, as quoted below, our Government not only as called for reduced trade disguised as "Buy American," but also angered our major trading partners as well.

From the New York Times, Monday, May 5th, 1930
From BBC NEWS: "The EU has increased its pressure on the US to reconsider the "Buy American" clause in the $800bn (£567bn) economic recovery package now before Congress.

The clause seeks to ensure that only US iron, steel and manufactured goods are used in projects funded by the bill.

A European Commission spokesman said it was the "worst possible signal" the Obama administration could send out.

The EU will launch a complaint with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) if the clause remains, the spokesman said."
The Cato Institute has even claimed this act to be Smoot - Hawley II. "For all practical purposes there is no difference between the Smoot-Hawley tariff bill of 1930 and the “Buy American” provisions in the $819 billion spending bill that passed the House Wednesday.

Smoot-Hawley was the catalyst for a pandemic of tit-for-tat protectionism around the world, which helped deepen and prolong the global depression in the 1930s. “Buy American” provisions will no doubt inspire similar trade barriers abroad and will have the same effect of reducing global trade—and therefore prospects for economic recovery. It is not unreasonable to say that U.S. policymakers are on the verge of taking us down that same disastrous path."

Here is more from the Washington Post: "
The stimulus bill passed by the House Wednesday contains a controversial provision that would mostly bar foreign steel and iron from the infrastructure projects laid out by the $819 billion economic package. A Senate version, yet to be acted upon, goes further, requiring, with few exceptions, that all stimulus-funded projects use only American-made equipment and goods.

Proponents of expanding the "Buy American" provisions enacted during the Great Depression, including steel and iron manufacturers and labor unions, argue that it is the only way to ensure that the stimulus creates jobs at home and not overseas. Opponents, including some of the biggest blue-chip names in American industry, say it amounts to a declaration of war against free trade. That, they say, could spark retaliation from abroad against U.S. companies and exacerbate the global financial crisis. "

UPDATE: Obama backs down on the anti-trade, protectionist "Buy American" clause: Good Move. Read more here.

January 30, 2009

Where Do Americans NOT Want To Live? See Below (Twin Cities)


According to a new study by the Pew Research Center, not many Americans want to to live in the Twin Cities.

"The Top 10 cities were all in the South or the West, led by Denver. Next were San Diego, Seattle, Orlando, Tampa, San Francisco, Phoenix, Portland, Sacramento and San Antonio.

The Twin Cities area landed 26th in the 30-city metropolis heap, followed by Kansas City, Cincinnati, Cleveland and Detroit.

The survey, conducted in the first half of October, questioned 2,260 adults by telephone.

Of those questioned, 16 percent said they would like to live in the Twin Cities area, 82 percent gave a thumbs down, and 2 percent had no opinion."

Well, at least Minneapolis finished ahead of Detroit.

Unemployment, GDP Data

The current unemployment rate, 7.2% as of December '08, should be expected to rise significantly when the January data arrives next Friday. The 4th Quarter GDP came out and the nation's output fell 3.8%, the worst growth rate since 1982. Expect it to get much worse before it gets better.

Where The Layoffs Are

Click on the chart above for an interactive Look at recent job cuts by industry and company. As you can see, the finance industry has been hit especially hard.

January 23, 2009

SIGNS OF THE TIMES

For more pictures of unsold cars around the world, click here.

Knoxville, Tennessee (above)

HOT: Family Dollar Stores, Up by +60% over the last 12 months

NOT: Target Corporation, Down by -30% over the last 12 months

January 12, 2009

THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE: HOW DOES THIS RECESSION COMPARE?

This is an interesting chart of unemployment rates over the last 60 years (Click to enlarge). The shaded areas are recessions. In 1974 the UE rate reached 9%, and in 1982 reached 11%. So our current 7.2% UE rate has yet to come close to these levels. Or maybe the worst is yet to come?

December 3, 2008

Recession: Already The Longest Since 1981-82

Read more here.

The "Undercover Economist" on Free Lunches

Tim Harford, author of the Undercover Economist, writes here how free lunches always leave a bad taste. This article brings to mind how the Wal-Mart worker who died after being stampeded by shoppers hungry for a shopping deal.

Harford writes: "The more attractive the gift, the more damage people will do to themselves, and each other, trying to get hold of it. If that idea seems counterintuitive, it is nevertheless true, as the managers of Ikea, the furniture giant, can testify. They opened a new London store recently, offering opening night discounts of nearly 90 per cent on a limited number of leather sofas. The store closed 40 minutes later after 6,000 people tried to force their way through the doors; several had to be taken to hospital.

The press immediately blamed either the boorish stupidity of the British public or the hypnotic influence of the wily Swedes. But the ill-tempered scenes are not unique to Britain: at the grand opening of Jeddah’s Ikea last summer, two people died in the crowds queuing to get hold of $150 vouchers. Nor are these incidents the result of some quasi-religious shopping frenzy. The curse of the free lunch is at work…"

Read more here.

December 2, 2008

It's Official: Recession Is Here: Began in December '07


The Recession that we all knew was happening is now officially here. Many, including Minnesota State Economist Tom Stinson, think this one will be much worse that the two previous ones listed above in '90 - '91 and '01. Predictions are quite grim for the Q4 US GDP.