
Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Tracking U.S. Economic Indicators
The U.S. economy is faltering. Family debt is on the rise, benefits are disappearing, the deficit is skyrocketing, and the mortgage crisis has worsened. Conservatives have attempted to deflect attention from the crisis, by blaming the media’s negative coverage and insisting the United States is not headed toward a recession, despite what economists are predicting.
The Bush administration’s latest move is to simply hide the data. Forbes has awarded EconomicIndicators.gov one of its “Best of the Web” awards. As Forbes explains, the government site provides an invaluable service to the public for accessing U.S. economic data:
This site is maintained by the Economics and Statistics Administration and combines data collected by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, like GDP and net imports and exports, and the Census Bureau, like retail sales and durable goods shipments. The site simply links to the relevant department’s Web site. This might not seem like a big deal, but doing it yourself–say, trying to find retail sales data on the Census Bureau’s site–is such an exercise in futility that it will convince you why this portal is necessary.
Yet the Bush administration has decided to shut down this site because of “budgetary constraints,” effective March 1:
Correction/Retraction of Julian Robertson "Utter Collapse" Story
Editor's Note: I had this at the top of today's news page for about 4 hours, turns out the transcription of the interview was heavily doctored and/or faked. Robertson did make some rather doomeresque statements in an interview but did not say we're heading towards "utter collapse." An accurate summary of his interview is posted at MoverMike.com:
The things attributed to Julian Robertson and utter collapse are
not true. Robertson said he was more disturbed than at any time
in his life. He said the American consumer is out of gas and
involved in the housing bubble that puts his dwelling at risk. He
doesn't see any way out, when dollar weakens. He expects the
Fed to inflate way out of the problem.
Here is a synopsis of what Ron Insana said.I am going to go way out on a limb here Maria. I think this credit crisis is viral and it's spreading quickly in all corners of the credit markets.
We talked earlier this week about auction rates on municipal bonds where we are having some failures on auctions taking place with banks unwilling to take the overflow when investors don't buy. We are going to have another crisis in munis beyond the bond auction issue.
I think ultimately when it's all said and done, the Fed is going to have to be the bank of Japan and go to zero interest rate policy to reflate our way out of this thing.
This is far bigger, far more misunderstood, than anybody knows. This is a real crisis of historic proportions and still no one is paying full attention. In the immortal words of Casey Stengel "Don't nobody here know how to play this game?"
When Kudlow said "I disagree" Insana chimed in "What a shock!"
Government Accountability Chief Resigns
By Elizabeth Williamson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 16, 2008; Page A07
One of government's chief internal watchdogs resigned yesterday, as Comptroller General David M. Walker, an outspoken gadfly and frequent witness on Capitol Hill, announced his plans to lead a new foundation focused on U.S. fiscal responsibility.
Walker has led the Government Accountability Office, Congress's investigative agency, for a decade.
Walker was an outspoken critic of the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare spending -- issues on which the Democratic-led Congress, and Republicans before it, have had trouble building consensus.
In September, the administration and the military took issue with a bleak GAO assessment of progress in Iraq; the top military command in Baghdad described the assessment as flawed and "factually incorrect." Despite last-minute changes to address the criticism, the final report cast serious doubt on U.S. efforts to build a functioning democracy in Iraq.
At the time, Walker told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: "Given the fact that significant progress has not been made in improving the living conditions of the Iraqis on a day-to-day basis with regard to things that all citizens care about -- safe streets, clean water, reliable electricity, a variety of other basic things . . . I think you'd have to say it's dysfunctional -- the government is dysfunctional."
Most of Walker's tenure was spent with Republicans in control of both the White House and Congress, and he has frequently irritated both bodies with his dire warnings on reining in spending.
During that time, "I would give Walker high marks for trying to stand up for GAO priorities even though he had a Congress that was trying to block him and which didn't want to know what the White House was up to," said Scott Lilly, senior fellow at the liberal-leaning Center for American Progress.
"He handled it as forcefully as he could, given that the Congress that was funding him was discouraging him."
The Walker-era GAO filed, but then declined to appeal, legal action to force Vice President Cheney to provide notes and information about meetings he held with energy companies while developing U.S. energy policy. A related suit wound up before the Supreme Court, which upheld the vice president's refusal to make the information public.
Walker's resignation takes effect March 12. He will lead the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, a new think tank whose mission, according to its Web site is "to enhance public understanding of the nature and urgency of selected key sustainability challenges that threaten America's future," including "unsustainable" growth in entitlement spending, and energy consumption.
The GAO's chief operating officer, Gene Dodaro, will serve as acting comptroller general until a successor for Walker is found.
"The one thing that bothers me the most, given this president's record on nominations: It's not likely we're going to get a new comptroller before next year," Lilly said.
"That's a very sad thing, given how much institutional leadership means toward improving oversight over government."
Pazdispenser wrote:Anti -
I have yet to come across a more succinct, and emminently clear description of the financial mess than your post of Fri Feb 15th. This should be the template (though of course it shant) for any future explanations of the topic.
Here's the thing I dont understand: cui bono?
I run an independent financial planning firm after having extricated myself and my clients from one of those firms most in the news. Knowg what I know about my former employer, it wouldnt surprise me in the least that the underlings, purely driven by bonus incentives, would sell us (and ultimately themselves) right over the cliff. And while the recently fired CEO of my former employer would impress you by being so unimpressive, Im still struggling with the thought that he and the heads of the other banks and brokerage firms wouldnt see the inevitable end to this scheme. And in those ranks, of course I include the Sec of Treasury (and former CEO of Goldman Sachs) Hank Paulson.
So, either Ive completely misunderestimated the greedy stupidity of this cohort, or they are operating in pursuit of a different goal than the financial success of their firms. If it is the latter, Im really missing the punchline. How does the wholesale destruction of the American economy benefit these men (and they are all men)? Given the ruthlessness of Chinese business practices, why would they allow themselves to face a future where they have to answer to anyone, much less the Chinese? My mother thinks they are so arrogant as to think they can not only "handle" the Chinese, but leave them holding the bag with no consequence. If shes right, then I guess this would fold back into the greedy stupidity theory.....
So anti, and any other awake mind, I ask you what is this all for? Is it just greedy stupidity? Is it Liz? even though The City (London's "Wall St" for those of you who dont know) seems poised to troubles at least as large as Wall St. Is it some Euro bankster led effort (hasnt Catherine Austin Fitts alluded to this?)? Is it the shadowy NWO looking to force through a North American Union with the Amero? Is it all of the above? Thoughts anyone?
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