Econ70
The Friday File: A recent survey assessing environmental factors known to affect hair including wind speed, humidity, UV index, and water hardness has found Miami is hair hell with a score of 81.23. Tampa followed, then came San Antonio, Dallas,…
Far from being a leading or coincident economic indicator, the unemployment rate is a lagging economic indicator. Here’s why. In a downturn, firms first stop posting jobs and then stop hiring. If things worsen, employers will reduce headcount through attrition…
The longshoremen strike from Maine through Texas shouldn’t be underestimated. As a supply-side shock, this will raise prices, but the Fed will ignore this as rate hikes won’t influence either side in this negotiation. Estimates put the economic cost of…
While Hurricane Katrina’s inflation-adjusted damage and economic losses exceeded $300 billion, and Ian, Sandy, and Harvey were all about $200 billion, initial estimates, which are likely to rise, put the impact of Hurricane Helene at $150 billion, making it the…
Last week, the Bureau of Economic Analysis revised economic dating back to 2019. The data now show savings rates not at 2.9% but a decent 4.8%, and real disposable income was upwardly revised by a huge $600 billion and is…
The Friday File: American Lael Wilcox recently cycled around the world in 108 days, besting the previous record of 124 set in 2018. With oceans inconveniently covering most of the Earth, circumnavigation means cycling at least 18,000 miles in the…
From 2010 until Covid, the neutral rate, the Fed funds rate that was neither expansionary nor contractionary, was near zero and rarely exceeded 2%. Many expect that going forward, the neutral rate will be systemically higher. The combination of a…
The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index sank a whopping 6.9 points in August, its biggest one-month decline since 8/21, when inflation was beginning its dreadful climb. This time, the concern is labor markets. 18.3% of respondents consider “jobs hard to…
Inflation fundamentals are stellar. Strip out lagging rents, and the remaining 93% of the CPI has slowed to a 1.7% Y-o-Y rate and is down to a 1% Y-o-Y rate over the six months to August. Moreover, the CPI on…
August existing home sales came in at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 3.86 million. This is down 2.5% M-o-M, 4.2% Y-o-Y, and marks the 36th straight month of year-over-year sales declines. August is the third straight month of sub-4…