Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Which Will It Be: United States of Europe OR United States of Germany?
- GDP Bounce: Disappointing Mixed Bag of Expectations and Revisions; Where to From Here?
- Police State "Ministry of Truth" Hits Spain; Man Fined for Calling Police "Slackers" on Facebook
Which Will It Be: United States of Europe OR United States of Germany? Posted: 30 Jul 2015 02:26 PM PDT Socialists Seek to Outvote Germany In the wake of the near-Grexit, France and Italy seek more powers for the European Commission (EC). And both countries want another parliament with more power. Their unstated goal is to create a United States of Europe where socialists would outvote the Germans. Germany Seeks to Prevent Being Outvoted German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble has a completely different idea: Schäuble Outlines Plan to Limit European Commission Powers. German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble is proposing to strip the European Commission of some of its core oversight powers in an effort to avoid politicising EU decision-making at a time when the executive body has touted its new partisan role in Europe.Battle Line The battle lines are clear: Stricter Rules and Less EC vs. Fewer Rules and More Politics. Let's not kid ourselves here. This is not an "effort to avoid politicising EU decision-making". Schäuble is scared to death about what the socialists have in mind. If there is a new parliament, France, Spain, Italy, and Portugal will all seek to "pool resources", the same general idea as "transfer German savings for politicians to spend elsewhere". Instead, Schäuble seeks "independent" bodies. Let's translate that as well. "Independent" really means "appointed by and to the liking of Germany". Because politics can change, Schäuble also seeks a fallback mechanism: "budget rules to be triggered automatically". Of course, France, Italy, Spain, etc., want no part of automated budget rules; they want to vote on rules because they know they can collectively outvote Germany any time they want. Here are the French and Italian proposals: United States of Europe Proposals
Which Will It Be? Let me summarize the debate with a question: Which will it be:
Please think before you vote. The answer could be neither. I purposely left out a key choice: The eurozone may still break apart. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
GDP Bounce: Disappointing Mixed Bag of Expectations and Revisions; Where to From Here? Posted: 30 Jul 2015 11:54 AM PDT This morning, the BEA reported Second Quarter GDP was 2.3%. 2.3% was at the low end of the Consensus Range of 1.9% to 3.5%. On the plus side, first quarter was revised way higher. Revisions
Evolution of First Quarter 2015 GDP
GDP is the most lagging of all indicators. By the time all the revisions are in (years later), no one even cares. I suspect after the "final" revision, first quarter 2015 GDP will be back in the negative column, with all of 2015 revised lower as well. Don't hold your breath waiting. Weak First Half Meanwhile, the first half of the year looks pretty weak. Last year, a first quarter GDP of -0.9% was followed by a huge second quarter surge to +4.6%, sustained with a strong third quarter +4.3%. In comparison, this bounce was feeble. Where to From Here? If retail sales do not pick up, and especially if auto sales slide as I suspect they will, third quarter will shock the economists who believe this economy is strong and getting stronger. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Police State "Ministry of Truth" Hits Spain; Man Fined for Calling Police "Slackers" on Facebook Posted: 30 Jul 2015 02:03 AM PDT On July 1, the Spanish Government went to "Full Police State", with enactment of law forbidding dissent and unauthorized photos of law enforcement. Spain's officially a police state now. On July 1st, its much-protested "gag" law went into effect, instantly making criminals of those protesting the new law. Among the many new repressive stipulations is a €30,000-€600,000 fine for "unauthorized protests," which can be combined for maximum effect with a €600-€300,000 fine for "disrupting public events."Man Fined for Calling Police "Slackers" We now have our first test case of this inane law. The Independent reports Spanish man fined up to €600 under new gag laws for calling police 'slackers' in Facebook post. A young man in Spain has been fined for calling the police lazy in a Facebook post – becoming the first citizen to fall foul of a series of controversial new "gag" laws.Is the US next? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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