Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- An Analysis of July Employment Numbers 1955 to 2013; Full-Time Employment Down Over 5 Million Since 2007
- World’s lightest and thinnest circuits pave the way for "imperceptible electronics"; Man vs. Machine Comparison
- IMF "Baseline Scenario" Projects Spain Unemployment Will Remain Above 25% for 5 Years with Little Growth
Posted: 03 Aug 2013 08:26 PM PDT Reader Tim Wallace provides another excellent set of graphs on employment as shown below. Full-Time Employment click on any chart for sharper image
Part-Time Employment Wallace writes: "The past five years are near or above the previous all time high set back in 1982. These five years are all in that abysmal range. No other year comes close. I expect things will get worse as the year continues." Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted: 03 Aug 2013 09:12 AM PDT The latest news from RoboHub shows World's lightest and thinnest circuits pave the way for 'imperceptible electronics'. Researchers from Asia and Europe have developed the world's lightest and thinnest organic circuits, which in the future could be used in a range of healthcare applications.Video on "Imperceptible Electronics" Link if video does not play: Imperceptible Electronics Carl the Robot Serves Drinks In case you missed it, please consider Carl the Robot Bartender Mixes Drinks and Chats With Customers Also note that Farm Robots to Make Migrant Worker Vegetable Pickers Obsolete; Welcome the "Lettuce Bot", the "Grape Bot", the "Strawberry Bot" Man vs. Machine Perspective For comparison purposes, a Facebook video shows "Humans are Awesome". Play the video for a very entertaining perspective on what Robots are up against. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Posted: 03 Aug 2013 03:50 AM PDT I am normally critical of IMF forecasts, but their baseline unemployment projection for Spain of 25% or more with no more than .6% annual growth through 2017 seems reasonable. The pessimistic scenario is a toxic deleveraging downward spiral that continues right now. The optimistic scenario assumes 2% growth, but that scenario does not start until 2018, and only if labor reforms in Spain and Europe take place. Via Mish-modified Google translate from El Economista, please consider IMF estimates that Spain will grow by an average of 0.6% over the next five years The team led by James Daniel, Chief of Mission of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to Spain, estimates unemployment, which will remain above 25% over the next five years.IMF Proposes Spain Reduce Wages by 10% in Two Years Via Google translate, La Vanguardia reports IMF Proposes Spain Reduce Wages by 10% in Two Years The IMF said today that it would be beneficial to Spain a social pact in which employers commit to hiring increases in exchange for wage cuts in agency models would be 10% in two years.IMF Silliness Hiking the VAT is ridiculous, hiring commitments are ridiculous, and although lowering wages is likely a good idea, the free market should set rates, not government bureaucrats who have no idea what wages should be. The best way for Spain to reduce its deficit is not by hiking the VAT, but by getting rid of government bureaucrats and lowering pension benefits for government workers. IMF Projections
The above table condensed from IMF Executive Board Concludes 2013 Article IV Consultation with Spain Note that the IMF does not think Spain will reduce its deficit below 3% until 2018. Prime Minister Rajoy thinks the deficit will be 2.7% by 2016. Recall that in April of 2012, Rajoy projected 3% by 2013. 2016 is fantasy-land material as well. Even the IMF projection is highly optimistic (at best). Spain may return to growth for a brief while later this year, but don't expect many jobs out of it. Spain needs labor reform, work rule reform, pension reform and lower taxes. So does France, Greece, Italy, and the rest of Europe. Unfortunately, Brussels is likely to demand higher taxes, and the unions are likely to resist the needed reforms. A further downward spiral is not out of the question, but neither is stagnation and zero growth (lower than the baseline scenario of the IMF). The optimistic scenario is five years away at the earliest, and unlikely at that, unless unions suddenly give in to badly needed reforms and/or some strong political leader can force free-market policies over substantial opposition. In the meantime, who knows what crazy rules the Nannycrats in Brussels are likely to come up with? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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