Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Bug In Search of Windshield; Japan’s Current Account Surplus Shrinks 63% as Machine Orders Plunge 14.8%
- Italy's Prime Minister Blames Finland and Netherlands for Spike in Yields
- Excellent Anti-Union News From Multiple Places Including US Supreme Court
- Trends in Duration of U.S. Unemployment
Posted: 08 Jul 2012 10:49 PM PDT With every data point, I become more convinced the Global Recession is Upon Us. Here is another data point to add to the list. Bloomberg reports Japan's Current-Account Surplus Shrinks 63% As Machine Orders Drop. Japan's current-account surplus was the smallest in May since at least 1985 and machinery orders fell the most in more than five years, adding to signs a slump in demand is threatening the nation's rebound.Explanation of Current Account For those unfamiliar with the term Current Account Wikipedia offers this explanation: In economics, the current account is one of the two primary components of the balance of payments, the other being capital account. It is the sum of the balance of trade (net earnings on exports minus payments for imports), factor income (earnings on foreign investments minus payments made to foreign investors) and cash transfers.Why This Is Important Japan's balance of trade is already negative, but the important point is the overall current-account of which trade is a part. If Japan's current-account was negative, Japan would depend on foreign capital to make up the deficit. Will foreigners fund Japan at 0% interest rates? I think not. Bug In Search of Window Japan has debt-to-GDP ratio of 220% and rising. As of July 9, the Yield on 10-year Japanese Bonds is .80%. A mere rise of 2 percentage points would consume all Japanese revenues just to pay interest on the national debt. Moreover, Japan's demographics are such that pension plans are now for the first time last year net sellers of bonds, not net buyers. For details, please see World's Largest Pension Fund Needs to Sell Japanese Bonds; Japan's Demographic Time Bomb Officially Goes Off As John Mauldin commented in his book Endgame, "Japan is like a bug in search of a window." If you have not yet picked up a copy, please do so. It's a good read. Once Japan's current account balance goes negative in a sustained way (and I believe that will indeed happen), the bug will have found the window. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Italy's Prime Minister Blames Finland and Netherlands for Spike in Yields Posted: 08 Jul 2012 09:01 PM PDT Like a drunk blaming a pebble in the road for causing his fall, Italy's Prime Minister Blames Finland and Netherlands for Spike in Yields. Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti denounced unnamed "northern" EU states on Sunday for taking positions that contributed to spikes in borrowing costs for Italy and Spain.Is there any country that recognizes its own responsibility in creating this mess? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Excellent Anti-Union News From Multiple Places Including US Supreme Court Posted: 08 Jul 2012 04:09 PM PDT At long last unions are on the run and losing battles in multiple places at once. Let's take a look at some dates and headlines. June 7, 2012 LA Times: 2 big cities OK cuts to worker pension costs Landslide victories on ballot measures to cut pension costs in two major California cities emboldened reform advocates, who said they expect a flurry of copycat initiatives and increased support for Gov. Jerry Brown's long-stalled push to curb the state's obligations to its employees.June 7, 2012 Washington Times: Labor unions feel pain of pension reform votes in San Diego, San Jose "San Diego's victory isn't just a win for San Diego taxpayers. It marks the beginning of the pension reform movement for our country," declared Lani Lutar, president and CEO of the San Diego County Taxpayers Association. "Tuesday the voters sent a very clear message to elected officials: Put the taxpayers first. Use our money prudently, and stop giving away benefits we can't afford."July 6, 2012 Mercury News: State will not override local pension votes, Senate leader Darrell Steinberg says "I would not favor doing anything that would affect the voter-approved initiatives," the Senate president pro tem told reporters Thursday, a day before the Legislature breaks for its summer recess. A spokesman for the Sacramento Democrat had said earlier that his boss "respects the will of the voters. ... It is presumed that any local initiative passed this year will be grandfathered-in to the eventual pension-reform legislation."July 5, 2012 Union Watch - Steve Greenhut: US Supreme Court Slaps Down California SEIU Union Dues Collection Scheme In Knox v. Service Employees International Union Local 1000, by a 7-2 vote, the high court slapped down the local – California's largest state-employee union – for deducting money from employees' paychecks and using it to fight against California campaign initiatives – without giving its covered nonmembers a chance to opt out of these political campaign contributions.July 3, 2012 Town Hall - Gina Loudon: Labor Unions Suffer Defeat on Taxpayer Revolt While the unions treat lawmakers in Sacramento, and most of the large cities like LA, San Francisco and Oakland like their concubines, having their way with them anytime they want, voters in the hinterlands, led by San Diego are not so compliant. In fact, voters in little El Cajon (pop. barely 100,000) showed big time el cajones by also becoming a charter city. A charter city differs from a general law city in that many of the day to day law making gets pulled from Sacramento to the local city council. Those laws include labor union laws. To date, voters in fully 122 California cities have voted to give Sacramento the bird.July 6, 2012 Town Hall - John Ransom: Teachers' Union Expelled from School District The Douglas County School District, a suburban community south of Denver, Colorado, has decided to part ways with their teachers' union in the absence of progress on a new contract which expired June 30th, 2012.Progress!! This my friends is what's called progress. As Ransom suggests, we hope to see a lot more of it. I have every expectation we will. Indeed, I would like someone to take the entire issue of collective bargaining of public unions as well as prevailing wage laws to the US Supreme Court. It is time to end the insane grip public unions have on US taxpayers. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Trends in Duration of U.S. Unemployment Posted: 08 Jul 2012 10:50 AM PDT Duration of Unemployment by Percentage: 5 Weeks and Under, 15 Weeks and Over, 27 Weeks and Over click on chart for sharper image Quick Figures
Grim Picture The trends paint a grim picture. With each recession the duration of unemployment has increased. Note that prior to 1990, shortly after recessions ended, the percentage of people unemployed 15 weeks and over, and 27 weeks and over dropped quickly. The last three recessions did not follow that pattern and the recession starting in 2007 is unprecedented in obvious ways. I believe a major reason the 27 weeks and over percentage is dropping now is people have exhausted all their benefits and have claimed disability or gone on "forced retirement" to collect social security benefits. Since the global economy has stalled (see Plunging New Orders Suggest Global Recession Has Arrived) and the US is headed for recession if not in recession (see 12 Reasons US Recession Has Arrived Or Will Shortly) there is not much realistic hope of these numbers showing drastic improvement except by more forced retirements or rising disability claims. For more on disability claims, please see ...
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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