Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- So Much For Today's Surprising "Drop" In Weekly Jobless Claims; California Forgot to Report 30,000 Claims; What We Learned Today
- Secessionist Candidate Will Overwhelmingly Win Mayoral Race in Antwerp, Belgium
- $210,000 Cow Milking Robot; Presenting the "Astronaut A4 - A Natural Way of Milking"; How Far Off is the Completely Robotic Farm?
Posted: 11 Oct 2012 04:50 PM PDT For the second time in less than a week surprising jobs numbers came into play. This morning the Labor Department reported a four-year low of 339,000 first-time claims. Some claimed this validated last Friday's jobs report, a silly notion because the two are not that closely related and a single week of data is meaningless. I still think Friday's jobs report will be revised away, but I am positive today's "surprising" report will be (for the simple reason California forgot to report 30,000 claims). Please consider Jobless Claims Data Skewed Downward. Initial jobless claims, which are a measure of the number of people recently laid off, fell by 30,000 to a seasonally adjusted 339,000, the lowest level in more than four years.Actually, the report isn't worthless, it's simply erroneous. Add back in 30,000 claims and the number is 369,000 right about where it has been for some time. Is there a conspiracy here? Once again the answer is no. This large state has a history of reporting "volatile" numbers at the beginning of quarters and that the Labor Department has complained and tried to work with the state to more accurately report its claims but with little success.What We Learned Today The labor department did not confirm the state was California but who else can it be? We did learn one useful piece of information today: The first couple weeks of every quarter are likely to be seriously messed up by under-reporting of claims from California. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Secessionist Candidate Will Overwhelmingly Win Mayoral Race in Antwerp, Belgium Posted: 11 Oct 2012 11:46 AM PDT With every down-tick in the European economy (and many more will follow) eurosceptic and secessionist candidates pick up support. Consider Antwerp Belgium where secessionist candidate Bart De Wever seems untouchable in Antwerp. Antwerp is the biggest Flemish city outside Brussels has half a million inhabitants. The present Mayor is the socialist Patrick Janssens, who faces a fierce battle against the popular Flemish nationalist leader Bart De Wever. If the polls come true, Mr De Wever will take it with ease.Antwerp Politician Rides Secessionist Wave The Financial Times reports Antwerp Politician Rides Secessionist Wave. The moderate nationalist leader of the New Flemish Alliance party (NVA), Mr De Wever has turned a local ballot in Belgium's business heartland into a referendum on independence for Flanders and the latest polls suggest there is momentum behind his call for secession.As I have said many times ... Eventually, there will come a time when a populist office-seeker will stand before the voters, hold up a copy of the EU treaty and (correctly) declare all the "bail out" debt foisted on their country to be null and void. That person will be elected. Antwerp is just a mayoral election. But we have seen the same sentiment in numerous regions in Spain. Eventually, something major will happen at the national level. Moreover, when sentiment does change nationally, that change will be sudden, unstoppable, and of course "unexpected" by the bureaucrats now in charge. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 11 Oct 2012 09:02 AM PDT Farmers seeking to eliminate nearly all labor associated with milking cows can take a look at the Lely Astronaut A4 system. Cows walk into a chamber attracted by higher quality food, the machine attaches itself to the cow, measures output quality, temperature, and when finished the cows walk out. There is no manual labor or oversight. Farmers can sleep in or do other chores. Bloomberg reports on the $210,000 Cow-Milking Robot The A4 does not require a human being at any point in the milking process, leaving farmers free to cook dinner, work the books, or play Parcheesi. That's because no one has to move a cow into the milking box. The animal goes there on its own because it knows there is feed there (the cows are fed traditionally, but the A4 contains higher-protein food, and cows are really good at knowing what they're eating and, more important, what they want to eat). The front of the box has a trough where a cow can eat a measured amount of grain while it's being milked.Completely Robotic Farms The A4 is described as a "Natural Way of Milking". I fail to see anything "natural" about it. However, it certainly looks like a fantastic way of lowering labor costs and increasing productivity. How far off is the completely robotic farm where driverless machines till the soil and plant crops, and driverless combines harvest the corn, wheat, and soybeans? In many respects, for some crops, it's already here. Farm and Ranch Guide reports Combine 'speaks' to driverless tractor pulling grain cart September 30, 2012The Kinze system can plant, fertilize, and harvest crops. It operates by GPS and comes with sensors that can detect objects (hopefully like children, dogs, deer and the like). This is an over-simplification of course but let me ask: Farm workers? Who needs em? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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