didn't the republicans want to blame the 2001-2003 recession on Clinton b.c of the whole lag thing.
2/4/2008 12:55:16 AM
^ Conveying information that a recession started during the term of a previous president, which was the case concerning the recession at issue, is not blaming that president. It is simply a statement of fact.This statement of fact concerning the recession in question was also undoubtedly an attempt to avoid the very blame that I referred to. Weren't you paying attention?
2/4/2008 1:14:01 AM
2/4/2008 6:01:23 PM
2/4/2008 6:23:56 PM
^^ TWW: The place to come for respect. STFU. ^ Understood. We simply disagree--and we somehow manage to do so without being disagreeable. Others should take a lesson. In any event, I have seen nothing you have presented or elsewhere that makes me think the U.S. economy is in for anything other than a slowdown. And you posted this:
2/5/2008 2:41:05 AM
Demand Up at Factories in DecemberBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESSPublished: February 5, 2008
2/5/2008 3:40:17 AM
^ thats due to the weak dollar, no?
2/5/2008 8:15:34 AM
ISM Non-Manufacturing Index out today. Not the best.http://www.cnbc.com/id/23009011
2/5/2008 3:41:31 PM
^^ That's one of the benefits of a devalued dollar--it fuels demand for exports.^ Not the worst either--see how that works?
2/5/2008 4:31:11 PM
By that definition, anything not as bad as 1929 is acceptable.
2/5/2008 4:35:03 PM
^ How ridiculous. The R-word cannot even be confidently used--though some are doing so--and you're ready to toss in the D-word? Simmer down.
2/5/2008 4:58:05 PM
Hold on there young fella. I wasn't saying that we're nearing a depression. I was saying that by your logic, any information that wasn't the worst ever, really wasn't that bad.I'd use a different D word referring to your arguments and that is desperate.
2/5/2008 5:00:03 PM
Hooksaw... in all honesty... did you even READ the article?
2/5/2008 7:33:20 PM
ahahah, nice.
2/5/2008 8:14:46 PM
^^^ Desperation? Hardly. I think some here and in the media echo chamber are desperately seeking a recession so they can make the economy a central issue against Republicans in general and in this presidential election cycle. The bash-Bush-on-Iraq method isn't sticking anymore, so the Democrats need to move the focus to the economy--soon enough, however, the Democrats and many here will figure out that Bush isn't running this year.
2/5/2008 8:23:42 PM
2/6/2008 1:54:05 AM
The economy is growing rapidly!Ok, the economy is still growing well!Ok, the economy is slowing down, but that's it! <--------------- after 9 pagesOk, so it's a recession, but it won't last long!Ok, so it's a pretty long recession, but at least its not a depression!It's all president Hillary's fault.[Edited on February 6, 2008 at 1:59 AM. Reason : .]
2/6/2008 1:58:48 AM
^^ and ^ Posts are so stupid.It's not my burden to prove that there's no recession--but I've presented a great deal of evidence from top economists that say there isn't a recession and there isn't going to be one. Show me two or more quarters of flat or negative growth in GDP and we'll talk. Keep hope alive, though, naysayers! PS: Economic slowdown =/= RecessionFYI. Deal with it.[Edited on February 6, 2008 at 2:37 AM. Reason : .]
2/6/2008 2:35:31 AM
2/6/2008 12:27:03 PM
guys. No reason to get all upset over a 'recession'. They happen with pretty good frequency. Its not going to be the end of the world when we go into one. for this area, the last recession was probably the hardest this area will see in a long time in that it was driven by dot.com and high tech busts. We dont have that type of problem with that sector this time.I am sick of hearing the news bitch about it, because they are scaring people into making whatever recession we get longer and worse.
2/6/2008 1:00:43 PM
2/6/2008 1:48:27 PM
I think you missed my point. My point is the recession isnt the worst thing in the world, it will come and go before you know it. Some people's lives are going to be affected by it, however, I doubt we will see unemployment reach the numbers we did in 2001. I think it will affect financial services the greatest, but the effect on other segments will be muted. The news is making people panic, and thats what I dont like.
2/6/2008 2:56:09 PM
2/6/2008 3:05:15 PM
^x5 naysayer:
2/7/2008 1:55:13 AM
i hear this guy knows a thing or two about economicshttp://money.cnn.com/2008/03/03/news/economy/bc.ne.buffettletter.ap/index.htm
3/3/2008 11:36:54 AM
hooksaw disagrees with Buffet.hooksaw took a class so he knows.
3/3/2008 11:40:04 AM
3/3/2008 11:57:25 AM
Buffett is incorrect. Recessions are defined by NBER using a large variety of data besides GDP. Buffet's criteria is one often used by economic journalists as a quick rule of thumb, but it is hardly a set rule that all economists have agreed upon.You need to remember WB is not an economist. That being said, I also think the US economy is headed for a recession. Though it has nothing to do with who is President.
3/3/2008 12:03:52 PM
^^ and ^ Um. . .I agree with some things that Buffett says and I disagree with some things he says--just as I do with any other person. I brought up Buffett simply to credit a source that I paraphrased.And BusinessWeek's Chief Economist Mike Mandel said this weekend that he doesn't think the U.S. economy is headed for recession--it's likely headed for a soft landing. And Mandel went on to say that the majority of economists surveyed do not think the economy will go into recession either--but we are headed for a slowdown in growth. In any event, weigh economists' predictions as you will:
3/3/2008 1:00:18 PM
one thing thats good about the euro going so high is that it makes countries less likely to buy that airbus thing i think
3/3/2008 1:01:37 PM
The dollar has crashed versus the yen, which sucks because I'm going to Japan in April It used to be ~120yen per dollar, now it's about 102 and sinking steadily.http://finance.yahoo.com/currency/convert?from=USD&to=JPY&amt=1000&t=1y
3/3/2008 1:06:19 PM
Falling dollar might mean our exports are cheaper for other countries to buy. No one ever seems to mention that this also means we can't buy as many imports though.
3/3/2008 1:11:36 PM
We have yet to see the same relative increase in import prices (ex energy) as the decline in the dollar. This is in some part due to foreign firms trying to maintain US market share by eating into profit margins. ^ This is probably why you don't read as much about decreased purchasing power of foreign goods. How long this will hold, however, is anyones guess
3/3/2008 10:16:21 PM
3/3/2008 10:56:06 PM
"Bounce in the club when the heat is on, all night on the beach til the break of dawn. I'm going to Miami, welcome to Miami."
3/5/2008 8:46:37 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWksEJQEYVUArmageddon - 1:43
3/5/2008 10:05:42 AM
3/5/2008 9:17:07 PM
^
3/6/2008 12:50:51 PM
^That's true. The often forgotten benefactor of free trade is the consumer, but because consumers are a disparate group, the same attention is not duly paid. Few news pundits mention the thousands of dollars a year Americans save through the purchase of less expensive goods. These savings, when aggregated, far exceed the costs of lost manufacturing jobs. Additionally, the net number of jobs in the US as a whole has increased, providing ample opportunity for displaced manufacturing workers to find new jobs.Also, China, too, is losing manufacturing jobs. China has lost far more jobs in manufacturing than the US. We are simply becoming more productive and require fewer workers for the same level of output. It wasn't too long ago it took a third of the population to produce the nations food supply. Obviously, the millions of jobs lost to productivity in agriculture have provided far more benefits than costs.^^Higher prices at the grocery store are largely a consequence of high demand for ethanol. As corn is used to feed livestock, higher prices of corn have resulted in higher prices of beef, poultry and milk. Additionally, as farmers of other crops (wheat, soy, ect) have switched to corn to take advantage of higher prices, supply of wheat, ect has decreased, resulting in higher prices for these crops as well. What we're left with is an across-the-board increase in food prices. This was widely seen coming by economists, but obviously not politicians.[Edited on March 6, 2008 at 8:54 PM. Reason : .]
3/6/2008 8:50:43 PM
We are progressing towards being beyond a reasonable doubt of a recession. The conversation now should be on the extent of the recession and the response necessary to battle it.
3/7/2008 9:22:16 AM
Unemployment 'unexpectedly' shoots uphttp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aJcGRsXmyltU&refer=home My favorite quote is the first line: "the U.S. unexpectedly lost jobs in February " Unexpected by whom? I fully expected it, and expect this trend to continue for a while."Economists had projected payrolls would rise by 23,000 " ahahahaha, seriously? That's a swing of 86K jobs (23K expected gain vs. 63K loss) in one month.
3/7/2008 10:59:23 AM
3/7/2008 11:24:38 AM
Look how resilient the economy has been despite all these bad events in recent months. Most other economies would have completely tanked by now--they would not be talking recession; it would be more like severe depression. And that's what I'm trying to get some of you to admit/understand. ^^ You forgot this part:
3/7/2008 12:12:03 PM
nobody cares about your thoughts about how resilient our economy is. That's nothing more than a moral victory. The rest of the folks in this thread want to discuss the problems that we're currently facing in the economy, not masturbate to fact that "hey at least we're not in a depression!"
3/7/2008 12:21:04 PM
^ I started this thread--I'll take it where the fuck I want. Stop riding my nuts, asshole.
3/7/2008 12:26:55 PM
Yeah, hooksaw. You've been touting the 'resiliency' line for awhile now. I don't really care if the economy is resilient right now because it's still tanking and tanking quickly. We had .6% growth last quarter and that is with Christmas. Now that the holiday season is over, housing continues to fall, oil prices are rising, food prices are rising, the auto industry continues to struggle... and so on and so on, I wouldn't be surprised to see -1% in this current quarter.Someone called me stupid when I said several months ago that the failing housing market/credit market would remove hundreds of billions of dollars from the US economy. But it is now obvious that that is exactly what happened. People stopped spending because the equity of their houses went way down and now that money that they got loaned doesn't exist. One of the great aftereffects of this is that the value of the dollar continues to slide, raising prices on every import we have, including oil. That's why oil has been rallying the past couple weeks. Because they have to raise the price to account for the falling dollar. For everyone else, oil is probably cheaper because demand is actually declining, but because the dollar is sucking ass right now we have to pay more.We are certainly losing ground on GDP right now. There's no question about it. Will it last 6 months so that we can officially call it a recession? Maybe. Right now it looks so, but it's so hard to predict these things. Maybe we'll miraculously pull out of this before July so that it's simply a bad period in economic history, but I really don't see that happening. Until the source of the problem (credit/housing) corrects itself, we're going to continue losing money at a time when we can least afford to. This will probably be one of the worst recessions we've seen in atleast 20 years.BTW, the DOW will close below 12000 today for the first time in over 1.5 years. The capital market is starting dry up too.[Edited on March 7, 2008 at 4:18 PM. Reason : ]
3/7/2008 4:10:20 PM
^1. ".6% growth last quarter" is still growth.2. "I wouldn't be surprised to see -1% in this current quarter." It takes two consecutive of negative--or zero--growth for there to be a recession. 3. Concerning housing, new products that have never existed before in the housing industry were tried these past few years--many were risky and ultimately failed. Some borrowers simply didn't bother to read the fine print in their loan applications, and others couldn't grasp the rather straightforward concept of ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES.Still, there's this:Fed to Make $200 Billion Available To LendersBank Seeks to Loosen Credit
3/10/2008 5:03:18 AM
^ Why do you insist on making it so easy?The VERY first paragraph of the story you posted:
3/10/2008 5:44:15 AM
^ 1. Um. . .I included the link--I kind of assumed somebody would read it.2. If the U.S. economy is not impressive, then why aren't we in a depression? I mean, look at all that has been happening and the economy still managed some growth.
3/10/2008 6:17:05 AM
Apparently you have a low threshold for "impressive".
3/10/2008 6:33:19 AM