Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Political Poker in Germany; Grand Coalition Possibilities Increase
- Men in Black Return to Spain; ECB Complains of Too Much Leeway; Alarm Bells Ring "More Tax Hikes Coming"
- India Housing Bubble Bursts; Panic Coming Next
- Where are the Jobs? Who Has Them? Who's Likely to Get Them?
Political Poker in Germany; Grand Coalition Possibilities Increase Posted: 13 Sep 2013 07:06 PM PDT On several occasions I stated there would not be a "grand coalition" following the next Germany election. The "grand coalition" is defined as a Merkel's CDU/CSU party forming an alliance with the opposition SPD party. The reason I came to that conclusions for five reasons.
Odds Change I am not changing my prediction, but I am changing the odds. When the data changes, you have to reconsider. And the data changed. SPD leader Peer Steinbrück has changed his mind about entering a grand coalition. Via unmodified choppy Google-Translate from Der Spiegel, please consider Discussions about possible grand coalition: Steinbrueck rises leadership. The goal of Peer Steinbrueck choice is clear: The SPD's top candidate wants after the election on 22 September chancellor of a red-green coalition will. Should there not be enough for it, he has a cabinet post in a grand coalition with the CDU have always excluded. Nevertheless Steinbrueck wants to be in the event of an election defeat SPD negotiator in talks with the Union.Political Poker Was Steinbrück lying then, or now? Or both? Is this a game to win votes? Or a real change of heart? Or no change of heart, just a lie the entire time? Quite frankly, I do not know. What I do know is that, in general, politicians will lie cheat and steal to stay in power. Should the opportunity present itself, would Steinbrück enter a coalition with Die Linke even though he said he wouldn't? Why not? He said he would not enter one with CDU/CSU and changed his mind. Might not he do so again? Might this all be a game of political poker? Perhaps Steinbrück is angling for a small CDU/CSU turnout – hoping all the SPD voters show up. Regardless, there is some chance Steinbrück really did change his mind. And if so, the odds just shifted. How much I do not know. For now, I am still sticking with "no grand coalition", even though the odds of a "grand coalition" just got better, perhaps on a political bluff. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 13 Sep 2013 01:17 PM PDT Men in Black Return Via translation, La Vanguardia reports Men in Black Will Examine Bank Bailout on Monday A mission of experts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will arrive in Madrid on 16 September to discuss with government and private sector rescue progress and Spanish banking sector reform, reported a spokeswoman for the international institution.ECB Complains of Too Much Leeway to Spain, Portugal Via translation, El Confidencial reports Brussels Gives Too Much Leeway to Spain and Portugal The European Central Bank (ECB) today launches a critique of the European Commission for being too lax in their setting requirements for Spain and Portugal. As a result of this laxity, doubt that Spain can meet this year's public deficit limit imposed Brussels (6.5% of GDP this year), despite the improvement seen in the first half of the year, as some fiscal consolidation measures will be relaxed in the latter part of the year.Alarm Bells Ring "More Tax Hikes Coming" ECB complaints of laxity, coupled with missed budget targets means one thing... more tax hikes are on the way. Via translation, El Economista reports alarm bells ring for tax increases to meet deficit targets. Data through July triggered an alarm in the government and international agencies, especially the downturn in revenue due to the contraction of social contributions and income tax, which will force Treasury to increase the tax burden to meet the revised deficit target of 6.5% of GDP in 2013 committed to Brussels.Tax hikes will doom whatever slim chance Spain had for an economic recovery (which was not much chance in the first place). Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
India Housing Bubble Bursts; Panic Coming Next Posted: 13 Sep 2013 11:17 AM PDT On August 1, in India Housing Bubble Still Expanding I posted a series of charts by Deepak Shenoy, an economic blogger at Capital Mind in India. Those charts showed the bubble in India was alive and growing. Here is one of the charts and a small bit of commentary .... As of March 2013, Prices have more than doubled since 2009. The All-India Index is at 211, from 100 in March 2009.The Bubble Bursts On Wednesday, the New York Times reported A Housing Slump in India The Orbit Grand, a block-size complex designed to have at least 26 floors of elegant apartments, an extensive array of ground-floor stores and abundant parking for the chauffeured cars of residents and shoppers, was supposed to be a diadem of India's real estate market.So... Work stops, builders default, condo complexes stall in mid-air, transaction volumes plunge, buyers lose interest, and sellers (for now) refuse to cut prices out of fear of causing panic. Have we seen this picture before? Yes indeed. It was supposed to be "different in India", just like it was supposed to be different in Las Vegas, Miami, Phoenix, San Diego, etc., etc. India Economy in Serious Trouble In September all hell broke loose. Here are some links.
Those links were from early September. On August 18, I noted Official Denials Run Rampant in India; "No Question" of Economic Crisis; Rupee Plunges to Record Low; Gold Coin Imports Banned Panic Coming Up Builders refuse to offer discounts for fear of starting a market rout, causing investors to panic in a self-fulfilling prophecy. Yet, it's far too late to stop panic. Moreover, the faster and steeper the panic, the better. Prices need to plunge to reasonable levels, and attempts to halt that process are counterproductive. Meanwhile, I will see if I can get a housing update from Deepak. The next few months may look interesting. Bear in mind, history suggests that transaction volumes will completely dry up, before the real plunge in price occurs. That may take another month or two of no demand from buyers. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Where are the Jobs? Who Has Them? Who's Likely to Get Them? Posted: 12 Sep 2013 11:39 PM PDT Inquiring minds who notice the alleged drop in the unemployment are asking "Where the hell are the jobs?" It's a good question. And I have details, by demographic age group, from reader Tim Wallace. click on any chart for sharper image Change in Number of Jobs Since 2007 Civilian Non-Institutional Population by Age Group Work Force by Age Group Number Employed by Age Group Percent of Population Group in Work Force Percentage in Age Group Employed Tim Wallace writes ... Hello MishStructural Demographics Poor Flashback May 22, 2008: In Demographics Of Jobless Claims I wrote ... Structural demographic effects imply that prospects in the full-time labor market will be poor for those over age 50-55 and workers under age 30.So, where are the jobs? They went exactly where I said they would: Boomers now compete with their children and grandchildren for jobs that do not pay living wages. I certainly did not envision the "Obamacare effect" in 2008, but the trend was already set in stone due to rising health-care costs and the age 65 kick-in of Medicare. Obamacare enhanced the trend I had already expected. Who is to Blame? Don't blame corporations or minimum wage laws. Blame the Fed, central bankers, fractional reserve lending, and Congressional silliness including Obamacare. For further discussion, please see ... Top 1% Received 121% of Income Gains During the Recovery, Bottom 99% Lose .4%; How, Why, Solutions Reader Asks Me to Prove "Inflation Benefits the Wealthy" (At the Expense of Everyone Else) Near-Record 20% of Americans Struggle to Afford Food and Basic Necessities; Who's to Blame? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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