© 2011 realeluxurymedia.corp - all rights reserved
Seeking Alpha Market Currents
|
MORNINGSTAR Morningstar Investing News and Insights
|
Seeking Alpha Dollar/Currencies stocks
|
Seeking Alpha Alternative Energy Stocks
|








A number of economic reports have come in lower than expected recently and the
talking heads on TV are perplexed as to why a sudden downturn is taking place.
Listening to their commentary, you will hear all sorts of fanciful explanations except
the most obvious one – the massive government deficit spending that has been the
reason for the apparent economic recovery has been frozen because the U.S.
national debt ceiling hasn’t been raised by Congress.
The debt ceiling is currently $14.3 trillion and this was reached in May. Debt was
already getting close to this figure as early as February however and federal
spending was decelerating long before May. Based on the 2011 fiscal year budget
(which runs from October 1, 2010 to September 30, 2011), the U.S. was on track for a
deficit as high as $1.65 trillion this year. This represents approximately 11% of U.S. GDP.
This 11% is just the deficit part of federal government spending, not all of it. Subtract
this from GDP, you would see GDP was only around $13 trillion – lower than before
the Credit Crisis began.
Moreover, the part of the GDP generated by the deficit is being paid for with
borrowed or printed money. Actually, it’s mostly printed money. The amount of
quantitative easing planned by the Federal Reserve in the first half of the year is
enough to cover 70% of the deficit. The government issues bonds to pay for the
deficit and then the Fed buys them with printed money. This is what has been
making the economic numbers look better and is being described by the
mainstream media as an economic recovery.
A monkey wrench was thrown into the works however when Congress refused to raise
the debt ceiling. As a consequence, deficit spending has ground to a halt for a while
(expect it to return soon) and this in turn slowed down the Fed’s effort to inject newly
printed money into the economy. How dependent the health of the economy is on
deficit spending supported by the Fed’s phony money operation has become
apparent in recent economic reports.
The May non-farm payrolls indicated only a 54,000 increase in jobs for the month.
Moreover, the previous two months were revised downward by 40,000 jobs. The
manufacturing sector, which has been leading the recovery, actually lost 5,000 jobs.
Close examination of the figures indicates there are well over two million less people
in the labor force than last year at this time. If they had remained in the labor force,
the current unemployment rate would be 10.6% rather than the reported 9.1%. It
would be highly unusual for the labor force to shrink at all, let alone by over two
million, if the economy was growing as it supposedly has been. People leaving the
labor force make the unemployment numbers look better than they are though and
government statisticians are well aware of this.
Regardless of how much recovery has taken place, it is clear that the goods
producing sector of the economy is weakening. While the ISM Manufacturing report
for May still indicated expansion, every component was lower than it was in the April
reading. New Orders and the Backlog figure were barely positive. The highest
component, as has been the case for many months, was Prices Paid – a measure of
inflation. It was down from a whopping 85.5 in April to a still very high 76.5 (above 50
indicates expansion). Much of the growth in manufacturing has occurred because
the items coming off the assembly line cost more, not because of there are more of
them. The Durable Goods reading from April, the most recent, was down 1.2%,
confirming less demand for the output of U.S. factories.
Tying it all together are the Leading Economic Indicators (LEI), an indication of where
the economy is heading. These were down 0.3 in April, indicating the economy is
likely to continue to lose steam. LEI will probably stay weak until the deficit ceiling is
raised and newly printed money can start flowing back into the U.S. economy at its
formerly prodigious rate. If this doesn’t happen, Americans might discover that just
like the proverbial emperor, the U.S. economy has no clothes.
Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
Author, "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s", Volume 1
http://www.amazon.com/Inflation-Investing-Guide-2010s-
ebook/dp/B0051GU06W/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1307366974&sr=1-3
Why the U.S. Economy
is Turning Down?
June 6, 2011
_____________________________________________________________________________
REAL E LUXURY