Econ70
Total undergraduate and graduate student enrollment in the US this past September was 19 million. Registration peaked in 2011 at 20.6 million. Matriculation at public four-year schools was 8.1 million, 5.7 million at public two-year schools, and 3.8 million at…
Healthcare spending totaled $3.2 trillion in 2015, up 5.8% from 2014, well above the rate of inflation, and now accounts for a dizzying 17.8% of GDP! However, it’s high-cost patients that drive these costs. The most expensive 1% of patients…
Dividing the number of cars made domestically by the number of cars sold here provides the US auto production percentage. Tesla wins as it exports almost half its cars so its percentage is 196%. BMW follows at 116%, then Ford…
Friday’s report showing a 0.6% rise in December retail spending was solid. While retail sales grew just 3.3% in CY16 and department store sales fell 5.6%, it’s because internet sales jumped 1.3% in December and 11.4% in CY16! Bears point…
The Friday File: While there are many business models used by retail clothing stores, such as fast fashion (H&M), haute couture, pret-a-porte, single-label (Polo), height & weight specific, discount (Marshall’s), and others, all involve a mark-up. I suggest that the…
Economists frequently talk about annual GDP growth and whether it will be 2% or 2.5% or 3%. These may seem like very small differences, but over time they are huge. Assuming population growth is 1%/year, it takes an excruciating 70…
The male labor force participation rate for those aged 25-54 has fallen from 97.9% in 1954 to 88%. With a Bachelor’s degree or more the rate is 94%, for those with some college the rate’s 88%, and for those with…
Elliot speaks on housing inventory in D.C. to the Washington Post. Read more here.
The total US debt is $19.9 trillion. Of that, $5.5 trillion is owned by the government (like the Social Security Trust Fund) and $14.4 is held by the public. Of the public part, $6.175 trillion is held by foreigners. Japan…
While December job creation was mildly disappointing at 156,000, the real story was the large 0.4% rise in monthly wage growth and the 2.9% rise in Y-o-Y wage growth, the largest Y-o-Y gain since 6/09. Moreover, job gains for October…