Slouching Towards Oblivion

Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2023

It's The Stoopid Economy


In case you were wondering, there's always a recession coming up ahead of us - or gathered around us - or falling off behind us.

ALWAYS

As far as we know - and it's all but a slam dunk certainty in economics - nothing expands forever, nothing stays the same forever, and nothing contracts forever. 

At this stage in our lives, how can it be that more of us don't know a few basic things about Capitalism and Markets and stuff?



U.S. economy grew 2.1 percent in 2022, ... (⬅︎ yay - great news - here's an apple for ya)

      ... but recession fears linger (⬅︎ razor blade in the apple)

GDP report shows six months of solid growth, including 2.9 percent expansion in the most recent quarter, though many economists say a slowdown may be near


The U.S. economy grew by 2.1 percent in 2022, notching six months of solid growth despite widespread concern that the country might be on the brink of a recession.

Those fears have been assuaged — at least for now. The economy posted another consecutive quarter of steady expansion between October and December, with economic activity increasing at a 2.9 percent annual rate. Consumer spending contributed to the strong fourth-quarter showing, especially given the slumps in large parts of the economy, including housing and manufacturing.

Still, the figure was a cool-down from 3.2 percent growth in the previous quarter, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Thursday.

The latest figures point to a resilient but slowing economy that has been tempered by the Federal Reserve’s aggressive efforts to control inflation. The central bank raised interest rates seven times last year in hopes that higher borrowing costs would lead businesses and households to cut back enough to slow the economy and curb price increases.

While some of those rate increases have already had a chilling effect — most notably in the housing market — economists say it could be months before inflation returns to normal. Many major banks are forecasting an economic downturn this year.

“You may see [growth] and think the economy is out of the woods, but that would be entirely the wrong read,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief economist at SMBC Nikko Securities America who expects a recession midyear. “There are a lot of variables that are all pointing in the same direction: There’s a housing recession. Manufacturing looks like it’s approaching recession. We’re seeing weakness in temp hiring. And it’s doubtful we’ve felt the full effects of all of the Fed’s rate hikes.”

The snapshot of economic strength is welcome news for the White House at a time when the economy continues to loom large among Americans’ top concerns.

House Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.) on Thursday lauded the “strong and stable” economic report and attributed recent growth to lawmakers’ efforts to lower costs, create jobs and invest in infrastructure. He also warned that a failure by Congress to raise the national debt limit in the coming months could lead to “an unprecedented economic catastrophe.”

Wall Street also cheered the data as a sign of the economy’s resilience. All three major stock indexes were up midmorning, and some analysts said they were hopeful the Fed could engineer a so-called “soft landing” by bringing down inflation without triggering widespread job losses or recession.

The report was also welcome news for the Fed, but isn’t likely to change its plans. The central bank is expected to raise interest rates again next week and possibly a few more times this year.

“Momentum has already begun to slow in response to rate hikes, but the bulk of the slowdown is yet to come,” Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG, wrote in a note to clients. “The Fed’s goal is to let growth stall out in 2023.”

The 2022 economy was, in many ways, defined by stubborn decades-high inflation. Higher prices on housing, food and gas strained family budgets and cut into corporate profits. The economy unexpectedly shrank in the first half of the year — setting off a flurry of recession fears — then returned to growth in the second half.

In the most recent quarter, continued consumer spending on services such as health care and utilities helped lift gross domestic product, which sums up goods and services produced in the U.S. economy. Consumer spending makes up more than 70 percent of GDP, making it a crucial part of the equation.

An increase in federal government spending also contributed to the gains.

But the economy was dragged down by a fast-cooling housing market, particularly a drop in construction of single-family homes, according to the report. Exports also decreased, and business spending slowed as companies grappled with higher interest rates.

The 2022 GDP figure marks a return to pre-pandemic growth rates after two years of wild fluctuations. The U.S. economy grew by a whopping 5.7 percent in 2021, after shrinking 3.4 percent the year before.

More broadly, in the decade following the Great Recession, the U.S. economy grew between 1.5 percent and 2.9 percent each year. Although 2022 growth falls squarely within that range, economists say the seesawing numbers behind that average — two quarters of contraction, followed by two quarters of expansion — mask a host of unusual and conflicting data points.

“Unlike most recessions, where the bottom essentially falls out everywhere, we’re in a period where the pain is hitting pockets of the economy at different times,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab. “Everything isn’t pointing in the same direction, which isn’t the norm. It’s unique to the covid era.”

In recent weeks, a number of the country’s biggest tech firms, including Microsoft, Amazon and Salesforce, have announced thousands of layoffs. Although those cuts have not yet spilled over into the broader job market, economists worry a slowing labor market could lead families to begin pulling back on purchases, which would further blunt the economy. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Already, there are signs that Americans are beginning to think twice about spending. Retail sales, which were robust for most of the year, began falling in November and continued their descent through the end of the year. Families are also working through their covid-era savings and beginning to rely more heavily on credit cards. Meanwhile some are putting off big-ticket purchases altogether.

Luke Cole, who builds custom wood furniture in Wilmington, N.C., says sales are down about 30 percent from a year ago, as economic jitters lead many of his clients to put off new purchases.

Although demand had doubled during the pandemic — in large part because so many people were moving into new homes — a slowing housing market has also put a damper on orders for new tables, chairs and benches.

“I’ve definitely seen a slowdown since the summer,” Cole said. “It hasn’t been a massive drop, but you can tell inflation and the looming possibility of recession are beginning to take their toll.”

The housing market, which is already in free fall, could face additional turmoil if laid-off workers do not find new jobs and are forced to sell their homes, economists said. Overall residential investments fell nearly 20 percent in 2022, with new home construction notching its first yearly decline since 2009.

Home sales, meanwhile, have fallen for 11 straight months, according to the National Association of Realtors, as a result of higher borrowing costs. Average mortgage rates more than doubled last year, from 3 percent to 7 percent, making homeownership considerably more expensive for would-be buyers.

At JayMarc Homes near Seattle, sales slowed for much of last year, then came to a complete halt in the last quarter of 2022. The home builder, which typically sells 20 properties a year, did not sell a single house between October and December.

“We were one of the fastest markets in the country — people were begging us to sell them houses — and then suddenly it stopped,” said chief executive Marc Russo, who laid off 10 of his 50 employees in the fall. “No one could predict that interest rates would go up threefold in a matter of eight months.”

This year, though, he says business has improved: He has sold five homes in the past three weeks. But Russo is not rejoicing yet.

“I don’t have a crystal ball,” he said. “The macroeconomy is out of our control.”

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Quoting Joe Biden

... but from about 12 years ago: "This is a big fucking deal"

Don't ever let me hear you say the Dems can't get some shit done.

NYT: (pay wall)

Democrats in Congress have had to scale back their legislative ambitions since last year, but the Inflation Reduction Act, passed by the House on Friday and sent to President Joseph R. Biden Jr. for his signature, is still a substantial piece of legislation, which will make big investments in the environment and health care, and increase taxes on some key groups.

Spending & Tax Cuts: $490 billion
Savings & New Revenue: $764 billion
  • Medicare prescription drug benefit $34.2 million
  • Affordable Care Act subsidies $64.1 billion
  • Wind and solar tax credits $51.1 million
  • Nuclear energy credit $30 million
  • Indiv. green energy credits $36.9 million
  • Clean manufacturing $37.4 million
  • Clean electricity credits $62.7 million
  • Agricultural conservation $16.7 million
  • “Green bank” $20 million
  • 15% corporate minimum tax $222.2 million
  • I.R.S. enforcement $124.1 million
  • Repeal regulation on drug rebates $122.2 million
  • Drug price negotiation* $99 million
  • Stock buyback tax $73.7 million
  • Limits on drug price increases* $62.3 million
  • Extend active loss tax limitation $52.8 million
  • Medicare prescription drug benefit $34.2 million
  • Affordable Care Act subsidies $64.1 billion
  • Wind and solar tax credits $51.1 billion
  • Nuclear energy credit $30 million
  • Indiv. green energy credits $36.9million
  • Clean manufacturing $37.4million
  • Clean electricity credits $62.7million
  • Agricultural conservation $16.7million
  • “Green bank” $20million
  • 15% corporate minimum tax $222.2 billion
  • I.R.S. enforcement $124.1 million
  • Repeal regulation on drug rebates $122.2million
  • Drug price negotiation* $99million
  • Stock buyback tax $73.7 million
  • Limits on drug price increases* $62.3million
  • Extend active loss tax limitation $52.8 million
The bill includes policies lowering the prices of prescription drugs; increasing the generosity of Medicare benefits; and encouraging the development of renewable energy and reducing the impact of climate change.

It would also raise taxes on some corporations and bolster the ability of the Internal Revenue Service to crack down on wealthy tax evaders. It would lower the federal deficit, though modestly.

The bill includes last-minute changes requested by Senator Kyrsten Sinema, Democrat of Arizona, the final holdout among her party’s 50 senators. Democratic leaders agreed to remove a tax on some wealthy hedge fund managers and private equity executives, and to include $4 billion in drought funding for her state.


What’s in the Inflation Reduction Act

Figures are in billions and over 10 years.

Spending and tax cuts: $490 billion

Health care
Cost in billions
Affordable Care Act subsidies
Expanded subsidies for three years
$64.1
Medicare prescription drug benefit
Increased generosity through Part D redesign and a $35 cap on co-payments for insulin
$34.2
Clean electricity
Cost in billions
New tax credits for emissions-free electricity sources and storage
Including wind, solar, geothermal, advanced nuclear, etc.
$62.7
Extending existing tax credits for wind and solar power
$51.1
Tax credit for existing nuclear reactors
To prevent them from closing
$30.0
Extend energy credit
Through 2024
$14.0
Clean energy rebates and grants for residential buildings
Rebates for installing heat pumps and retrofitting homes
$9.0
Financing for energy infrastructure
Updates and expands lending programs to make energy generation and transmission more efficient
$6.8
Tax credit for carbon capture and storage
$3.2
Manufacturing
Cost in billions
Clean manufacturing incentives
Incentives for companies to manufacture clean energy technologies in the U.S. rather than abroad, through tax credits and the Defense Production Act
$37.4
Reduce emissions from energy-intensive industries
Such as concrete production
$5.3
Individual clean energy incentives
Cost in billions
Green energy credits for individuals
Extends and increases tax credits for energy-efficient properties
$36.9
Clean fuel and vehicles
Cost in billions
Tax credits for new and used electric cars
Incentives for purchasing emissions-free vehicles, with income limits, and for installing alternative fueling equipment.
$14.2
Clean hydrogen production
$13.2
Fuel tax credits
Creates new credits for low-carbon car and airplane fuels, and extends credits for biodiesel and other renewable fuels
$8.6
Financing for clean energy vehicles
Loans and grants for the production of hybrid, electric and hydrogen fuel cell cars
$2.9
Air pollution
Cost in billions
“Green bank” for energy investments
For investments in clean energy projects, particularly in poor communities
$20.0
Other air pollution reduction
Includes funding for monitoring and reducing pollution, and grants for disadvantaged neighborhoods
$14.8
Conservation, rural development and forestry
Cost in billions
Agricultural conservation
Funding for agricultural practices that improve soil carbon, reduce nitrogen losses and decrease emissions
$16.7
Rural development
Investments in clean energy technology in rural areas
$13.2
Forest conservation and restoration
Includes funding to reduce risk of wildfires
$4.8
Transportation and infrastructure
Cost in billions
Improvements to federal buildings and highways
$5.2
Electric transmission
Loans and grants to finance electricity transmission, including for offshore wind energy generation
$2.3
Other climate spending
Cost in billions
Drought resilience
$4.6
Weather and climate resilience
Includes investments in coastal areas and weather forecasting resources
$4.6
Other federal research, projects and oversight
Includes funding for FEMA, D.H.S. and D.O.E.
$4.2
Zero-emissions U.S.P.S. trucks
$3.0
National Park Service funding
Includes funds for climate resilience and habitat preservation
$1.0
Data collection and environmental reviews
$0.8
Other
$0.7
Tribal funding
Clean energy, electrification, drought relief and climate resilience for federally recognized tribes.
$0.5
Wildlife recovery and habitat climate resilience
$0.3

Savings and new revenue: $764 billion

Taxes
Revenue in billions
15% corporate minimum tax
$222.2
I.R.S. enforcement
Projected net revenue raised from $80 billion in compliance and enforcement funding.
$124.1
Stock buyback tax
$73.7
Extend active loss tax limitation two years
$52.8
Health care
Revenue in billions
Repeal a regulation on prescription drug rebates
This regulation has never gone into effect, so the savings are mostly just on paper
$122.2
Drug price negotiation*
Medicare negotiation on prices for certain drugs
$99.0
Limits on drug price increases*
$62.3
Energy and climate
Revenue in billions
Methane reduction incentives
Sets methane waste emissions thresholds and charges facilities that exceed them. (Increased revenue net of new spending.)
$4.8
Reinstatement of Superfund
Increased revenue net of new spending.
$1.2
Tax to fund the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund
Permanent extension
$1.2
New oil and gas leases
On federal land and in the Gulf of Mexico
$0.5
Other tax adjustments
$0.3
Wind lease sales
$0.2
*These are rough estimates because of changes to the drug price provisions in the bill after cost and savings estimates were released. Savings from the drug price negotiation policy may end up being lower, and the savings from limits on drug price increases are unofficial estimates based on an analysis by Don Schneider, a former chief economist of the House Ways and Means Committee.

But if the current bill includes a lot — in spending, new taxes and policies — it also omits a lot of the Democrats’ original ambitions. Missing is an entire set of family policies that were in a bill passed by the House last year, like a generous child tax credit and paid family leave.

Certain health policies, such as an expansion of Medicaid to give more low-income adults health insurance, have been removed to pare down the bill’s cost. And though the climate policies are the most expansive passed by any Congress, they are more modest than those included in earlier versions of the legislation.

The current bill includes clean electricity incentives that are comparable in size to those in a version passed by the House last year. But it scales back spending in almost every other category, from transportation to climate resilience. Some proposed investments from earlier versions — like those for lead remediation, work force development such as a Civilian Climate Corps, and electric bicycle tax credits — did not make it into the new text. The one major exception is manufacturing: Compared with previous versions of the bill, this legislation marks a significant increase in grants, loans and tax credits to manufacture clean energy technology domestically.

But it also pairs new climate spending with several major concessions to the fossil fuel industry at the request of Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, whose support was necessary to advance the bill.

Here’s how the legislation compares with the much larger social safety net and climate bill passed by the House in November, often referred to as Build Back Better.


How the Bill Compares With Build Back Better

Figures are in billions and over 10 years

Energy and climate
Tax credits and new spending
$392$570
Health care
Home health care through Medicaid
$150
Expanded subsidies for Affordable Care Act health insurance
$64$130
New Medicare hearing benefit
$35
Increased generosity in Medicare's prescription drug benefit
$34
Health care work force spending
$25
Family benefits
New child care program (6 years)
$270
Four weeks of annual federal paid family and medical leave
$205
Universal preschool for 3- and 4-year-olds (6 years)
$110
Individual tax cuts
Child tax credit increase for one year; fully refundable after 2022
$190
Expanded earned-income tax credit extended for one year
$15
Other tax changes
$10
Other
Build and support affordable housing
$175
Immigration reform
$110
Other spending
$115
Higher education and work force
$40
Total$490 billion$2.15 trillion

Health care
Negotiation of certain drug prices and limit price increases*
$162$160
Repeal a regulation on prescription drug rebates
$122$145
Adjustments to uncompensated care pools
$20
Corporate taxes
15% corporate minimum tax
$222$320
Stock buyback tax
$74$125
15 percent global minimum tax and international taxation reforms
$280
Other
$105
Individual taxes
Expand the net investment income tax
$250
Surtax on income above $10 million
$230
Extension of limits on excess losses of noncorporate taxpayers
$53$160
Increase state and local tax deduction cap through 2025
$15
Other revenue
I.R.S. enforcement
$124$130
Methane fee, Superfund fee and other revenue
$18$50
Total$775 billion$2 trillion
*The figure for the Inflation Reduction Act is a rough estimate because of changes to the drug price provisions in the bill after cost and savings estimates were released. Savings from the drug price negotiation policy may end up being lower, and the savings from limits on drug price increases are unofficial estimates based on an analysis by Don Schneider, a former chief economist of the House Ways and Means Committee.

The Inflation Reduction Act is projected to reduce deficits by roughly $275 billion over 10 years, while the Build Back Better plan passed by the House would have added about $160 billion to deficits.

Democrats have said the new bill’s deficit reduction, as well as the provisions aimed at lowering energy and prescription drug costs, will help address the rapid inflation over the past year. Many economists, including supporters of the bill, have said that while it may reduce price pressures, the overall effect is likely to be modest, and over the long term.

The promise of taming inflation helped bring Mr. Manchin on board, who cited concerns about rising prices when he pulled his support from the bill passed by the House last year.

In a statement last month after an agreement on a new bill had been made with Democratic leadership, Mr. Manchin announced, “Build Back Better is dead, and instead we have the opportunity to make our country stronger by bringing Americans together.”


The fact that we had to carve off an awful lot of meat that could help an awful lot of people should tell us we have to send more Dems to Washington to help Biden & Co get the rest of what we need.

If we do that, we could be flyin' this time next year.