Archive for economic stimulus

State of US Economy After Trillions of Taxpayers Funds – Update

So how is the economy given all the money the US Taxpayer are pumping into the system?

How long will Americans wait for results before judging success or failure of their leaders during this crisis?

Take this poll.

Courtesy of CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER – Apr 3, 2009

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THE STATE OF UNEMPLOYMENT

13.2 million: People unemployed in March 2009 — the most ever in records that date to 1948

12.8 million: Population of Illinois, President Obama’s home state

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A CITY’S WORTH OF JOB LOSSES

663,000: Net loss of jobs in March 2009

637,000: Population of Baltimore

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COLLEGE STILL COUNTS

4.3 percent: Unemployment rate for college graduates

9 percent: Unemployment rate for people who graduated from high school but did not attend college

13.3 percent: Unemployment rate for those with no high school diploma

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UNDEREMPLOYED

9 million: Number of part-time workers who would have preferred full-time work last month — the most in records dating to 1955

2.1 million: People without jobs who wanted to work, were available and had looked in the last 12 months, but had not looked in the last month.

15.6 percent: Unemployment rate including involuntary part-time workers and those who hadn’t looked in 12 months — the highest in records dating to 1994

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DOWNTURNS, THEN AND NOW

8.5 percent: Unemployment rate in March 2009

10.8 percent: Unemployment rate in December 1982, one month after deep recession ended

October 1983: Last time the unemployment rate was higher than the current level

59.9 percent: Portion of the total population that had jobs in February

July 1985: Last time the portion was this low

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MARCH UNEMPLOYMENT RATE BY GROUP

8.8 percent: Adult men

7 percent: Adult women

10.8 percent: Female heads of households

6.4 percent: Asians

7.9 percent: Whites

11.4 percent: Hispanics

13.3 percent: Blacks

21.7 percent: Teenagers

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RECESSION AS JOB KILLER

5.1 million: Net job losses since recession began in December 2007

651,000: Jobs lost in February 2009

741,000: Jobs lost in January 2009

681,000: Jobs lost in December 2008

122,000: Jobs lost in March 2008

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WHO’S SURVEYED

60,000: Number of households interviewed in the monthly Census Bureau survey from which the unemployment rate is extrapolated

40 percent: Portion of companies in the survey of businesses, from which payroll and job loss numbers are extrapolated, with fewer than 20 employees

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Bank Lending Continues to Plummet Despite Trillions of Taxpayers’ Bailout Money Spent

After trillions of dollars issued to various failed financial institutions to bailout failed companies, to stabilize the financial system of the United States and to stimulate the economy, the banks failed to cooperate.  Bank lending continues to plummet.

So why are trillions of taxpayers’ bailout money going out the door?

Bank Loans Plummet as Obama Boosts Lending Efforts (Update1)
By Emre Peker

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Bank loans fell to a record low in the first quarter as the Obama administration steps up efforts to jump start debt markets and revive corporate lending.

Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. led banks in providing $79.6 billion of syndicated loans in the three months ended yesterday, a 61 percent drop from $203.2 billion a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The volume has dropped from $446.4 billion in the first quarter of 2007, before credit markets seized up amid the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Banks are hoarding cash and driving up borrowing costs as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner seeks to spur them to resume lending by enticing private investors to buy troubled assets clogging their balance sheets. Companies including casino operator MGM Mirage and toymaker Mattel Inc. are agreeing to pay higher interest rates to maintain their credit lines.

“Banks are very much reducing their credit commitments overall, there’s no question about that,” Nicholas Bijur, assistant treasurer of PG&E Corp., said yesterday in a telephone interview. “In addition to the dollar amount, the pricing terms seem to have changed.”

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Confused About How Government Is Working to Fix the Economy?

Well, don’t feel alone.  As United Technologies announced today that 11,600 jobs will be eliminated in 2009, these future unemployed will join the 12.5 million Americans who are currently unemployed as of the end of February 2009.  Year to date figures shows 1.3 million jobs eliminated which is an average of 22,135 jobs lost every day.

In the midst of the economic decline, it appears that there is much debate about the causes of the recession and the government remedies to arrest job loss, foreclosures and restore confidence in our financial sector which is widely believed to be the epic center of the crisis.

Jim Puzzanghera of the LA Times wrote on March 9, 2009:

Some experts say what these ventures have done is make an AIG or a Citigroup that’s “too interconnected to fail.” And it’s not just the size that would matter. AIG’s interconnectedness with other companies, markets and economies is so huge and convoluted that it’s almost impossible to foresee what all the consequences of collapse would be.

The prime example of this problem is about $500 billion in unregulated credit default swaps held by AIG. Those complex financial instruments are essentially insurance policies taken out on mortgage-backed securities and other assets. The swaps were designed to pay out money to buyers who got caught in exactly the type of financial crisis taking place right now.

In essence, AIG was committed to insuring hundreds of billions, if not trillions, of dollars in investments. When the housing market crashed and the economy nose-dived, those investments tanked as well. And AIG was liable for the losses — a liability so large that it is now overwhelming the rest of the company, including the still-profitable parts.

What’s worse, because credit default swaps were unregulated and the layers of transactions so arcane that they are difficult to understand clearly, the true cost is essentially impossible to measure with certainty. Once the dominoes began to fall, no one knew where the process would end.

“People don’t know the exposure, so as a result there’s a huge premium on fear and the unknown,” said Kent Smetters, associate professor of insurance and risk management at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

However, Ralph Vartabedian of the LA Times wrote on March 10, 2009:

But critics contend that what was originally proposed as an overwhelming gesture of government resolve to get banks on their feet now seems like an intravenous drip, barely sustaining the giant institutions that account for the majority of U.S. bank assets. As time goes on, the problems appear again to be deepening.

“Some of these banks are walking dead and should be closed,” said Sen. Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, a 20-year veteran of the Senate Banking Committee and its senior Republican. “We are propping up financial institutions that are insolvent and have already failed. The government has made a political decision to keep them going at the taxpayers’ expense.”

At the other end of the political spectrum, the AFL-CIO Executive Council voted unanimously last week to urge President Obama to nationalize problem banks as a way to stimulate and stabilize the financial system.

“Every day we delay is another day workers in this country feel the pain of a stagnant economy,” said Richard L. Trumka, secretary-treasurer of the labor organization, a powerful influence on the Democratic-controlled White House and Congress.

Despite, P. Parameswaran wrote of US Federal Reserve Chairman as saying,

“In the near term, governments around the world must continue to take forceful and, when appropriate, coordinated actions to restore financial market functioning and the flow of credit,” he told the Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank, in Washington.

Speaking ahead of a weekend meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank chiefs in London, Bernanke said while fighting the current crisis, policymakers should embrace reforms to the financial architecture that could help prevent a similar turmoil from developing in the future.

“We must have a strategy that regulates the financial system as a whole, in a holistic way, not just its individual components,” he said.

“In particular, strong and effective regulation and supervision of banking institutions, although necessary for reducing systemic risk, are not sufficient by themselves to achieve this aim.”

Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer reported today:

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says that within the next couple of weeks the administration will unveil its plan for dealing with the toxic assets that lie at the heart of the current financial crisis.

Geithner says that the plan the administration has put together will provide low-cost government financing to private investors who are willing to purchase the bad assets that are currently clogging banks’ balance sheets.

It is clear that our despite the expectation of the US Government to always have the answers or solutions to the problems of society, it is abundantly clear that they don’t.  As painful as it maybe to experience first hand the fumbling of government, it appears that finally that the government leaders who are charged with turning the economy around are beginning to focus in on the issues and causes which is good news.  The first step to solving any problem is first identifying the problems and causes.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied 380 points today as Citibank reported positive operating profits the first two months of this year.  Perhaps, we’re beginning to see a glimmer of light in this dark and winding tunnel.

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