Econ70
The Friday File: Though the US no longer makes high-tech stuff like ipads and cell phones, or low tech stuff like shoes, we are a paper clip powerhouse. Most of the 11 billion sold, made in the US. Why? Since…
NHTSA recently concluded that equipping large school buses (those weighing more than 10,000 lbs) with seat belts is unnecessary. NHTSA claims large busses are among the safest modes of transit and that when children are killed, seat belts would not…
Despite a perpetually lousy economy, the Yen continues to rise; Three reasons. First, deflation makes the Yen worth more tomorrow than today encouraging investors to hold it despite microscopic interest rates. Second, Japan’s large trade surplus ensures continued demand for…
Total debt is the sum of all IOUs ever issued by the Treasury and is (egad) 98% of GDP. Total debt is the sum of the public debt–which is held by individuals, foreign gov’ts and financial institutions–and is 61% of…
Researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco find that 2.7% of consumer spending went to Chinese made items. Moreover, for every $1 spent on Chinese made goods, fully 55 cents goes to US businesses for services like shipping,…
The Friday File: The US Tax Court just ruled that under the Parsonage Allowance of 1921 an ordained clergy member may now live tax-free in an UNLIMITED number of homes owned by his or her religious organization, or receive a…
Google’s $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility, and its 17K patents, will get FTC and Justice Department approval. After all, it’s a big company picking up a small one in a very different space. The big concern is that Google…
QE worked miracles by injecting massive liquidity into the economy in ’08 and ’09, and staved off a depression. While smaller, QE2 boosted equity prices and weakened the $US which boosted exports, raised commodity prices and headline inflation. If we…
House prices are currently weak in the UK, France, Germany Ireland, Italy and the US. But they are way up in Canada, China, Hong Kong, Israel, Singapore, S. Africa and Sweden. Why? The former countries had a housing bubble that…
Weak in review: 10-yr Treasury rates fell to their lowest level since 4/50 and the stock market plummeted! This was due to the unfolding Euro disaster, a benign fear of long-term US inflation and a dismal Philly Fed number, a…