Wednesday, July 02, 2014

positive outlook

Maybe Lucy won't snatch the ball away this time.

1) Yellen making the right sounds. Rhetorically swats John Taylor.

"Yellen conceded that policymakers “failed to anticipate” the ensuing global financial crisis but also argued that monetary policy would have been “insufficient” to address the problems that caused it. Higher rates would not have beefed up regulation or increased the transparency of the exotic new financial instruments at the heart of the crisis -- or the firms that helped generate them.

In fact, Yellen said that raising rates would likely have caused greater unemployment, which would likely have led to more people defaulting on their debts."

2) John Williams predicts stronger growth in the 2nd half and over 3 percent the next 2 years. Could be good for the Democratic candidate in 2016.

3) Dean Baker:
Big Drop in Profit Share in First Quarter GDP
Tuesday, 01 July 2014 13:24

Quarterly GDP data are erratic and profit data in particular are subject to large revisions, but hey it's still worth noting a big drop in profit shares reported for the first quarter of 2014. The data released by the Commerce Department last week showed the profit share falling from just over 21 percent of net value added in the corporate sector in the last quarter of 2013 to less than 19 percent in the first quarter of 2014. Here's the picture.
corporate profits


It's too early to make much of this drop in profit shares. It is also a bit disconcerting that it is all attributable to a drop in the capital consumption adjustment, the difference between accounting depreciation and economic depreciation as measured by the Commerce Department. (In other words, the Commerce Department is showing a larger gap between what firms record for accounting purposes and the actual rate of depreciation of capital.)

Anyhow, with all the appropriate caveats, this may be the first sign that the sharp rise in profit shares in this century is being reversed, or as Gerald Ford once said, our long national nightmare is over.
And he adds in comments:

can't attach much meaning to profit share drop
written by Dean, July 02, 2014 2:53
Ideally the drop in profit shares would mean that workers are getting a share of the gains from growth, meaning higher wages. But, the data for the first quarter show the economy shrinking, which means there were no gains to be shared. So we really can't draw much from this picture yet. However, if the profit share stays down and we get decent growth the rest of this year, that would mean that workers will finally be seeing some wage growth.

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