Gas Prices

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 27 September 2013

The economy has almost completely recovered (the people in it, not necessarily so much)

Posted on 06:30 by Unknown

. - by New Deal democrat

This morning's release of personal income and spending completes the monthly reports for the 4 big coincident indicators for the economy, shown in the graph below, in which the pre-great recession peaks are normed to 100: Industrial production (blue), payrolls (red), real retail sales (green), and real personal income ex transfer payments (orange):

Photobucket Pictures, Images and Photos

Personal income rose 0.4% in August, and the PCE deflator only rose 0.1%, so real personal income rose 0.3%. July's number was also revised higher by 0.1%.

Real GDP completely recovered to its pre-recession highs over a year ago. As shown in the graph above, both real income and real retail sales are also above their pre-recession peaks. Payrolls, which contracted by over 8 million jobs, are about 1.6 million from their pre-recession peak. At 160,000 jobs a month, it will take us 10 more months to exceed that peak. If the +345,000 preliminary upward revision by the BLS for the last year sticks, it will take 8 more months. Finally, industrial production has made up all but 1.7% of its 17% loss during the recession. Depending on how you measure its trend from the June 2009 bottom, it should exceed its pre-recession peak in about 5 to 8 months.

Since the short leading indicators for the economy suggest that there will be a little more strength in the next 6 months or so, it looks very much like the economy will have fully recovered by sometime next spring. Should that come to pass, then at that point we'll no longer be talking about economic recovery, but simply economic expansion.

Where there's been not so much of a recovery, of course, is when you measure per capita, and in particular by population-adjusted job creation, and in median wages. The economy is actually doing pretty good, the average American in it, not necessarily so much.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • A rare stock market forecast for 2014
      - by New Deal democrat I have a new post up  at XE.com , commenting on recent speculation about a stock market crash vs. a pullback due to...
  • Pensions and Bankruptcy: a fix is available and should be enacted by Congress
      - by New Deal democrat Yesterday a bankruptcy judge decided that, Michigan's Constitution notwithstanding, the city of Detroit could b...
  • Median family income continued stagnation in 2012
    - by New Deal democrat Berkeley Professors Saez and Piketty have updated their work on family income in the US through 2012, making use o...
  • The anatomy of median wage stagnation: paltry wage increases and gyrating gas prices
     - by New Deal democrat Periodically in the last 6 months I have written stories challenging the dominant narrative about "median house...
  • Consumers Are Spending More on Durable Goods This Recovery
    The chart above from the St. Louis Federal Reserve shows non-durable (in blue) and durable goods (in red) purchases, with 2007 being base 10...
  • Why even debating breaching the debt ceiling is a Big F*g Deal: a nonpartisan note
    - by New Deal democrat Regardless of your politics, you should care very much not just whether or not we actually fail to increase the deb...
  • British Pound is Rallying
    The above chart shows the pound verses the dollar.  Over the last few months the economic news from the UK has been very promising.  It has ...
  • 2014 forecast: a year of deceleration
       - by  New Deal democrat My method of foecasting is pretty simple. In fact, so simple, I call it the K.I.S.S. method. Even though the LEI ...
  • Market Analysis: US
    The US did not release any economic data last week, so all we're left with is the performance of the markets.  Let's start with the ...
  • Subdued inflation takes average wages to near 3 year high
     - by New Deal democrat So anyway, we've gone from a dry spell where there was barely any data to write about, to a deluge of new inform...

Categories

  • Australia
  • Auto
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • Chile
  • China
  • CPI
  • employment
  • Europe
  • GDP
  • Germany
  • India
  • Investment
  • ism manufacturing
  • ISM Service
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • PCE
  • Peru
  • PPI
  • UK

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (7)
    • ►  January (7)
  • ▼  2013 (293)
    • ►  December (54)
    • ►  November (38)
    • ►  October (58)
    • ▼  September (79)
      • ECRI recession call: unhappy two year anniversary
      • Market/Economic Analysis: US
      • 'Breaking Bad' finale predictions
      • Leave comments here
      • A thought for Sunday: an undemocratically elected ...
      • Weekly Indicators: are consumers voting agains...
      • Weekend Weimar, Beagle and Pit Bull
      • Japan Continues To See Inflationary Increase
      • Europe Catching a Bid
      • The economy has almost completely recovered (the p...
      • India Raises Rates 25 BP
      • Making Sense of the Durable Goods Numbers
      • Initial claims last week ex-California computer gl...
      • What Happened to the Perp Walk?
      • UK Economy Continues To Look Promising
      • Gas price trend nears its best in a decade
      • In case you were wondering . . .
      • Employment Burns While Washington Fiddles
      • Corporate Bond Market Selling Off With Treasury Ma...
      • Germany Heading In The Right Direction
      • New Home Sales Stalling Under Higher Rates
      • Comments Are Off Until DAN KENNEDYS LIFESTYLE LIBE...
      • Chinese Rebound Continues
      • Oil Is Still At High Levels
      • Economic/Market Analysis: US
      • Weekly Indicators: Aroma's Coffeehouse edition
      • Weekend Weimar, Beagle and Pit Bull
      • American Manufacturing is Resurgent -- Thanks to A...
      • Gold's Long Term Trend Is Still Down
      • Why do Doomers hate Supertrains?
      • Initial jobless claims likely ~318,000 last week e...
      • Ben Blames Congress
      • Despite Market Sell-Off Chile Is Still Attractive
      • Recent Indian Bounce Looks Purely Technical
      • Housing decline is cause for concern, but no red flag
      • The Non-Existent Inflationary Threat
      • Higher Rates Hitting Homebuyers
      • Peru Still Attractive As An Investment
      • Industrial Sector and Copper Relationship Broken
      • OECD Developed Market LEIs Increasing
      • Coincident indicators rebound from July stall
      • China'a Recent Rebound In Detail
      • Conservative Economic Thought: 0 for 3 The Last Fi...
      • Keep an Eye On Oil
      • Market/Economic Analysis: US
      • Breaking bad thoughts
      • A thought for Sunday: Millenials and the emerging...
      • Weekly Indicators: Manufacturing and transport bre...
      • Why America Is Not the Greatest Country Anymore
      • Retail sales un-stagnate
      • Wherein I nit-pick Profs. Paul Krugman and Mark Th...
      • Chinese Economy and Market Rebounding
      • Five Years After The Collapse ....
      • Actually, it's Republican Leadership That Is Causi...
      • Canada Continues Its Economic Doldroms
      • The UK Is Printing Strong Economic Numbers
      • Median family income continued stagnation in 2012
      • The Moderate Expansion Continues; ISM Adds Bullish...
      • The Latin America Sell-Off Is Consolidating Losses
      • Oil Becoming Potential Major Economic Threat
      • The gaping hole in the jobs recovery is manufacturing
      • Market/Economic Analysis: US
      • Weekly Indicators: paradigm shift edition
      • Weekend Weimar, Beagle and Pit Bull
      • One bit of good news in today's jobs report: avera...
      • August jobs report: yellow flag for the second mon...
      • More Evidence of a EU Recovery
      • Vehicle sales achieve pre-recession normal range
      • Initial jobless claims continue improving trend, s...
      • Brazil Prints Stronger Than Expected GDP Number; I...
      • Balance Sheet Recession About Over
      • More on demographics and median income
      • More On the ISM/GDP Relationship
      • Yen Continues Consolidation
      • Surprisingly strong ISM manufacturing
      • India Prints Weak GDP Number, Adding Further Downw...
      • US Economic/Market Analysis
      • Labor Day Humor: Star Trek verses Miley Cyrus
      • Weekly Indicators: Labor (consumers) spends, corpo...
    • ►  August (64)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile