Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Historical Effect of Tax Increases/Decreases

And now...we are seeing another round of various pundits and politicians claiming that tax increases during the Clinton years did not hamper growth and that tax cuts during the Bush years did not encourage growth.  You can make statistics say anything, and even if the statistics do not agree with your ideology, you can claim they do and most of the public will be none the wiser. 

The story is:
Even though common sense would dictate not raising taxes in the face of a badly weakened economy and almost non-existent job growth, the President and his supporters argue that tax hikes will not imperil the still-nascent recovery because the economy grew during the 1990s after President Bill Clinton raised taxes. The inference being that today’s economy could also absorb the blow of tax hikes and grow despite them. They also argue the converse: that the tax cuts passed during President George W. Bush’s tenure slowed growth and cost jobs.

But...the truth is:
The economic defense of the Clinton tax hikes does not hold up against the historical facts. The economy did exhibit strong economic growth during the 1990s, but rapid growth did not occur soon after the tax hike—it came much later in the decade, when Congress cut taxes. After the 1993 tax hike, the economy actually slowed to a point below what one would expect, considering the once-in-a-generation favorable economic climate that existed at the time.
and
It was at this point [when the 2003 tax cuts took full effect] that economic growth took off. From May 2003 until December 2007 (when the recession caused by the global financial meltdown occurred) the economy created 8.1 million jobs, or 145,000 a month. By comparison, after the beginning of the 2001 recession and before the 2003 tax cuts, the economy was losing 103,000 jobs a month.[7]

Lost Tourism

The travel industry is claiming that the difficulty of obtaining a US visa is reducing the number of foreign tourists visiting our fair land. 
Two grim facts: More Chinese now visit France than the United States, in part because it's hard to get a U.S. visitors visa. And while the U.S. used to be the destination for 17 percent of the world's tourists in 2000, that's dropped to 12.4 percent and shows no sign of changing.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Driving Businesses Away

An article with good examples and stats about how tax and regulatory burdens influence business decisions.  Set in California, but with strong implications for elsewhere and the country as a whole.  Short story, despite historically strong advantages that have been very attractive for business location and growth, the tax and regulatory climate that has been created is now driving businesses (at least on the margin) out of the state. 

Is Fatherhood Irresponsible?

As this article questions, has fatherhood become an irresponsible action?  In other words, has the social/legal game become so stacked against men that a responsible man will choose not to have kids?  Thought provoking, but I think it lacks something - specifically that it sets up an interesting dichotomy:  If you father children, you are either an irresponsible idiot or you are a hero taking risks and accepting a less materially wealthy life in the hope of benefiting your society in the future (and if you are the second, you might merely be arrogant). 

Faux Market in China

If the students of a particular course of study are consistently unable to find employment in their line of work, the Chinese government reduces the funding for academic efforts in that discipline.  This is a market solution, sort of.  Market in the sense that the Chinese gov relies on the signal of available employment for people with particular skills.  Not market in the sense that the government determines when/how much to cut the funding.  In a full market, people would study, struggle finding jobs, new students would see/hear that students with certain skills were struggling to find jobs and avoid those disciplines so as to avoid the hardship, the dearth of students would directly reduce the funding for those academic topics. 

Now, in the US, we have many areas of study with little discernible market value, yet with many students.  You have seen this particularly highlighted by various OWS protestors saying that society owes them a job in their area of study/"skill".  The US is (mostly) a market economy.  Yet we do not see the market correction mechanism I outline above.  Why? 

I think it is because our society goes to great lengths to not only facilitate education, but also to reduce the pain if the topic of that education is chosen unwisely.  My question:  We are told that public support for higher education is important for the general social value of everyone.  But is that social value still net positive if some amount of the educations we support commence people who then do not give/add to society, but take? 


Saturday, November 19, 2011

Which college career to get a job?

Your chances of getting a job, and the pay you will probably earn upon getting a job in your major field, vary greatly with the major you choose.  Go here.  Feast your eyes and soul.

Majors with the highest unemployment rates?  Architecture, clinical psychology, educational psychology, library science, linguistics and literature, are all among the least likely to have a job.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Government unemployment

A table from the BLS, showing the unemployment rate for various types of workers.  Government workers have the lowest unemployment, in fact, about half the average overall unemployment.  Remember that the next time you here the "increased unemployment of government workers" used as justification for why the government should spend money to reemploy various government employees.  Table attached.


Table A-14. Unemployed persons by industry and class of worker, not seasonally adjusted

HOUSEHOLD DATA
Table A-14. Unemployed persons by industry and class of worker, not seasonally adjusted
Industry and class of worker Number of
unemployed
persons
(in thousands)
Unemployment
rates
Oct.
2010
Oct.
2011
Oct.
2010
Oct.
2011
Total, 16 years and over(1)
13,903 13,102 9.0 8.5
Nonagricultural private wage and salary workers
10,990 10,126 9.3 8.5
Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction
89 69 10.4 7.8
Construction
1,445 1,129 17.3 13.7
Manufacturing
1,474 1,200 9.5 7.7
Durable goods
937 759 9.8 8.0
Nondurable goods
537 441 9.0 7.3
Wholesale and retail trade
1,888 1,764 9.2 8.6
Transportation and utilities
404 462 6.9 7.8
Information
300 195 9.8 6.6
Financial activities
590 524 6.7 5.8
Professional and business services
1,525 1,495 10.6 10.1
Education and health services
1,263 1,221 5.8 5.6
Leisure and hospitality
1,458 1,448 11.1 10.8
Other services
554 618 8.8 9.6
Agriculture and related private wage and salary workers
176 198 11.0 13.4
Government workers
950 924 4.3 4.3
Self-employed workers, unincorporated, and unpaid family workers
557 612 5.4 6.1
Footnotes (1) Persons with no previous work experience and persons whose last job was in the U.S. Armed Forces are included in the unemployed total.
NOTE: Updated population controls are introduced annually with the release of January data.

Unemployment

Recently the idea was promulgated that the economy lost "8 million" jobs during the Bush presidency.  Actually the economy on net added over 1 million jobs from start to finish of the Bush presidency, and that is accounting for the lost jobs from the market crash to the end of Bush's term. 

But let's look at losses.

According to numbers published by the BLS, the peak of jobs in this country (thus far) occurred in January 2008.  The low point (of the recession/recovery thus far) occurred in February 2010.  About 8.75M jobs were lost during this period of time.  A period of time that includes one year each of the Bush and the Obama presidency.  Info from HERE

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Federal Registrar

Mentioned THIS in class yesterday.  New Federal regulations are expected and on pace to total over 80,000 pages this year alone. 

Small Businesses and Government Regulations

According to THIS, complying with government regulations is the most pressing concerns on the minds of small business owners. 

Monday, November 14, 2011

Why the Drachma Cannot Return (also, Death of the Welfare State)

Typically in economics it is said that "bad money drives out good," meaning that that a government issuing a money will slide toward fiat and/or inflationary currency methods.  However, in THIS ARTICLE, Brian Wesbury turns the conventional saying on its head.  Saying that "a weak currency cannot replace a strong one", Brian argues that Greece cannot go back to the Drachma.  In fact, he argues that no country in the Euro-zone could in fact leave the Euro except Germany.  Why?  Well because no country has the ability to institute a money of equal strength to the Euro except Germany.  Investors, businesses, speculators, even citizens themselves, will flee a weak money. 

The difference?  The typical saying is from the perspective of the issuing government and which money they will choose.  Wesbury's phrase is from the perspective of those who would actually USE the currency. 

I of course, love these concluding sentences:
As a result, Greek fiscal problems must be solved by a shift away from the welfare state. This is true for Italy, Spain, Portugal, and for every other nation in Europe which will eventually face the reality that the experiment with the welfare state has failed.
This is the real lesson of European budget problems. Government spending does not create wealth. It never has, it never will, and monetary shenanigans cannot change that fact. Free markets are the only way to create wealth.

Mundell vs Friedman on the Euro

From HERE, a neat look at the debate between Milton Friedman and Robert Mundell.  Two winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics.  Two opposing views on the creation of the European monetary union, the Euro.  Friedman was against the formation of the Euro, basically saying that it was driven by politics and therefore would be administered politically and that European countries at different stages of growth required different monetary policy to be successful in the long term.  Mundell liked the Euro because it would end destabilizing monetary speculation between European country and push them along the path of political integration.

Could they both be right?  I think so, to a certain extent.  Who is ultimately correct about the Euro being a good idea or not?  We will find out.  Possibly very soon.  

Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Do Marriages Create Inequality?

Income inequality, that is.  Maybe.  Think about this:
A similar analysis found that income inequality has fallen among individuals since the early 1990s, but risen among households due to factors such as more marriages of people with similar education levels and earnings potential.
Very interesting.  Shows the difference between looking at individual people and households.  Makes sense though.

The article also talks about when income inequality peaked (hint, a while ago) and a couple other interesting tidbits. 

Roman Monetary System

Interesting perspective on Euro, the Roman coinage system, and international monetary systems.  I found this particularly interesting:
As such, the cities and regions, notably in the Greek or Syriac-speaking East, struck their own lower-value bronze coins as a complement to the usually higher-value imperial coins, leading to specific monetary zones.

From HERE .

Monday, November 07, 2011

Being a Millionaire

Turns out that many of the people who have incomes greater than $1,000,000 don't have those incomes for very long.  From HERE