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Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

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  • #31
    Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

    What about the shadowstats "SGS alternative" where

    The SGS Alternate Unemployment Rate reflects current unemployment reporting methodology adjusted for SGS-estimated "discouraged workers" defined away during the Clinton Administration added to the existing BLS estimates of level U-6 unemployment.

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    • #32
      Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

      Originally posted by metalman View Post
      but if they read itulip's analysis it's friggin obvious... inescapable... where's the disconnect? why don't other economists challenge itulip? take on ej mano y mano.

      oh, yeh, now i remember... Are We Idiots? - iTulip.com... not begging for an asshanding.
      I don't think there is as much deliberate malice among economists, or sheer incompetence in the media as some of us here may believe. A lot of what is now going on in the population at large, and within the media, strikes me as quite normal for humans actually.

      The response to all the recent "worst in decades" economic data reminds me of the stories that came out after Chernobyl. Scientists and operations personnel were found wandering in the wreckage, staring at chunks of radioactive graphite from the reactor strewn all about, and not at all comprehending what had happened. All of their training and experience convinced them that such a thing could never happen. Classic cognitive dissonance.

      All of our "training and experience" is that a truly severe economic contraction simply cannot happen. After all we have "social safety nets", and regulations, and Keynesian economic theory, and a Federal Reserve headed by someone who is an expert on the Great Depression, and all these other things that were not in place in the 1930's. So how could this possibly be happening?

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      • #33
        Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

        Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
        It's not just Roubini. After the BLS jobs report came out today, how many economists were lined up on financial TV to explain why "it's the bottom"? I don't know about you folks, but after one hour of replays tonight I've already lost count...

        The favourite statistic to quote in support of this position is the comparison of 2.6 million "official" job losses in 2008 vs the worst post-WWII experience of 2.8 million in 1945. Nobody, absolutely nobody [Taleb excepted, maybe?] is ready for the level of job losses in 2009 that iTulip is expecting.
        I've heard this comparison made, too, and couldn't decide if the speaker was mentally lazy or deliberately misleading his audience. The counting issue alluded to above is an issue, of course, but the comparison is useless, as stated, even if the official and real numbers were much closer at both points in time.:rolleyes: National population in the US in 1946 was estimated at 132,481,000, and the July 2008 estimate is 303,824,640. The USA is not yet close to the unemployment problem it experienced in 1945, although it seems to be heading there in a hurry.

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        • #34
          Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

          This will add a bit more to what Verrocchio called to attention. http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/ed...2009/0109.html 1/9/09

          Originally posted by Sy Harding, newsletter writer
          Meanwhile, comparisons to the number of jobs lost in previous periods, particularly to the 1940’s and 1950’s are misleading and fear-mongering. The population and labor force were considerably smaller then, so similar job loss numbers in those decades represented a much larger percentage of the work force.

          The loss of jobs in the current cycle, as bad as they sound and have been, has only returned the labor force to its level of February, 2006, a level of employment that had the economy humming along quite nicely thank you.

          However, more importantly, the employment picture is not the place to look for early signs of the economy bottoming anyway. Employment is a lagging condition in both directions. Remember how employment remained strong right through last summer, which had economists (and the Fed) saying there would be no recession because employment remained strong, even though as we now know, the recession had begun in December, 2007.

          In the other direction, as always the stock market (which always looks ahead six to nine months) will have already recovered significantly before the recession bottoms and the economy begins to recover. And the economy will have already recovered significantly before employment will begin to pick up again.

          But as always, investors and TV analysts worry a lot about the employment numbers, not only legitimately about what they are saying about the economy, but uselessly what the jobs numbers are saying about the stock market going forward.

          For instance, let’s go back and see how the stock market fared after the previous terrible monthly job losses to which the December numbers are being compared.

          When that horrible report of September, 1945 was that 2 million jobs had been lost, the stock market had already bottomed in 1944, and was up 35%. After the jobs report it added another 17% over the next five months. When the terrible report in October, 1949 was that 834,000 jobs had been lost that month, the stock market had already bottomed in June and was up 12% when the report came out, and then added another 22% over the next seven months. When the terrible report came out in December, 1974 that 602,000 jobs had been lost that month, the stock market bottomed three days later, and the Dow gained 53% over the next ten months.

          By all means market-timing is going to continue to be important if you are to make, and keep, profits from the market. But the jobs picture has no place in timing the stock market.
          Jim 69 y/o

          "...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)

          Dedicated to the idea that all people deserve a chance for a healthy productive life. B&M Gates Fdn.

          Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.

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          • #35
            Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

            The vowel endings have it! Obama agrees with Roubini!

            This is beyond disappointing to me. The data and analysis for unemployment projections presented by iTulip is very convincing. I see no logical explanation that could conclude that unemployment would peak at 8.8% without a plan and 8% with a plan.

            This indicates that the people that President elect Obama has surrounded himself with have won the day. The Plan indicates that if we take the same old steps you would in any Recession (tax cuts, infrastructure spending, unemployment extensions), we can recover the FIRE economy and everything will return to normal. Unless this plan gets changed dramatically toward more Alt-E development and transport, you better have a parachute because we are stepping off the cliff.

            Real GDP (billions
            of chained 2000 $) Payroll Employment
            Without Stimulus $11,770 133,876,000
            With Stimulus $12,203 137,550,000
            Effect of Package Increase GDP by 3.7% Increase jobs by 3,675,000
            Source: Authors’ calculations based on methodology described above and multipliers
            described in Appendix 1.
            The table shows that we expect the plan to more than meet the goal of creating or saving 3 million
            jobs by 2010Q4. There are two important points to note, however:
            First, the likely scale of employment loss is extremely large. The U.S. economy has already lost
            nearly 2.6 million jobs since the business cycle peak in December 2007. In the absence of stimulus,
            the economy could lose another 3 to 4 million more. Thus, we are working to counter a potential
            total job loss of at least 5 million. As Figure 1 shows, even with the large prototypical package, the
            unemployment rate in 2010Q4 is predicted to be approximately 7.0%, which is well below the
            approximately 8.8% that would result in the absence of a plan.

            http://otrans.3cdn.net/ee40602f9a7d8172b8_ozm6bt5oi.pdf
            Last edited by we_are_toast; January 11, 2009, 11:46 AM. Reason: added graph

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            • #36
              Interactive Unemployment Timeline Map - MSNBC

              Here's an interactive unemployment timeline map of the USA showing unemployment by state for the past year or so, currently up through November 2008.

              http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27913794/

              As of the November data, California, Oregon, Michigan, South Carolina, and Rhode Island are the worst with unemployment in the 8-10% range. Throughout the post tech bubble recession, Oregon had the highest or second highest unemployment in the country, peaking at 8.5% in 2003. We're already at 8.1% and I have no reason to believe we won't be at or near the top this time too.
              Last edited by zoog; January 14, 2009, 05:46 PM. Reason: oops forgot Rhode Island, it's so teeeny on the map

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              • #37
                Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen



                So the Obama administration predicts his recovery plan will keep the peak in unemployment around 8% in Q3 2009 after which it drops to 5% by mid 2013.

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                • #38
                  Re: Interactive Unemployment Timeline Map - MSNBC

                  Originally posted by zoog View Post
                  Here's an interactive unemployment timeline map of the USA showing unemployment by state for the past year or so, currently up through November 2008.

                  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27913794/

                  As of the November data, California, Oregon, Michigan, South Carolina, and Rhode Island are the worst with unemployment in the 8-10% range. Throughout the post tech bubble recession, Oregon had the highest or second highest unemployment in the country, peaking at 8.5% in 2003. We're already at 8.1% and I have no reason to believe we won't be at or near the top this time too.
                  I think that California (the place i love) will be at 14% unemployment at the end of 09 jmho

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                  • #39
                    Re: Interactive Unemployment Timeline Map - MSNBC

                    Originally posted by RickBishop View Post
                    I think that California (the place i love) will be at 14% unemployment at the end of 09 jmho
                    like this?


                    Forecast July 2008

                    Ground Zero state
                    National Unemployment Growth Rank: 4
                    Macro-economic Vulnerability: High
                    Unemployment Growth Rate: High
                    Estimated Post Recession Peak Unemployment Rate: 10%
                    Future Home Values Rating: Poor

                    Actual January 2009



                    Reassessment: With unemployment already pushing 8.5% from 6.5% at the time of our previous forecast, we are revising our forecast for CA unemployment to peak at 12% versus 10%.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                      why doesn't Fred answer the question: 12% or 20%? Please don't parse the answer with references to old stat formulas. Do you have different opinions? Have you revised your estimate?

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                      • #41
                        Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                        What will the impact be on unemployment stats when Obama's jobs programs get going? Fewer people out of work in the short term, and more in the long term?

                        I've noticed a few places that they're starting to talk about "providing or saving" three million jobs -- an obvious political out in the event that unemployment continues up after the program is in full gear.

                        Also, does anyone else sense an impending change in the way unemployment numbers are calculated? After all, if Clinton can do it, why can't Obama -- especially since he's basically bringing the whole Clinton team back with him. It's a lot easier to win with statistics if you can fudge the numbers.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                          Originally posted by Sharky View Post
                          What will the impact be on unemployment stats when Obama's jobs programs get going? Fewer people out of work in the short term, and more in the long term?

                          I've noticed a few places that they're starting to talk about "providing or saving" three million jobs -- an obvious political out in the event that unemployment continues up after the program is in full gear.

                          Also, does anyone else sense an impending change in the way unemployment numbers are calculated? After all, if Clinton can do it, why can't Obama -- especially since he's basically bringing the whole Clinton team back with him. It's a lot easier to win with statistics if you can fudge the numbers.
                          the idea is flawed... we have a service/fire econ. they ain't suited for road repairs.

                          numbers fudging is the last refuge of the scoundrel. if the definition of 'unemployment' changes that tells us everything we need to know about obama.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                            Originally posted by metalman View Post
                            if the definition of 'unemployment' changes that tells us everything we need to know about obama.
                            ...or the fact that he will spend more of US taxpayers money on god only knows what.

                            More of the same Keysian crap, except that the package is a lot more presentable than during the previous Presidency.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                              Originally posted by metalman View Post
                              the idea is flawed... we have a service/fire econ. they ain't suited for road repairs.
                              Is it really even possible for the government to create new jobs? The jobs would be paid for by either borrowing or new taxes -- but those funds would have been put to work producing jobs in the private sector if they weren't borrowed or taxed.

                              So where do the new jobs come from? Maybe borrowing from overseas investors?

                              Or perhaps "new jobs" means something different to the Obama administration than it does to the rest of us?

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Jobs crash arrives on schedule - Eric Janszen

                                Originally posted by metalman View Post
                                the idea is flawed... we have a service/fire econ. they ain't suited for road repairs...
                                Oh puleeeze. The very thought of Wall Streeters getting dirt under their carefully manicured fingernails. Horrors.

                                They don't need to be suited for road repairs, metal. The FIRE economy jobs will be saved by nationalizing the financial sector. Voila. Instant public sector employees...and not a single Lunchbucket Larry to spoil the day.

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