Sunday, December 4, 2011
Saturday, July 30, 2011
More Bad News for 2011
Yesterday the Commerce Department came out with the 2nd quarter estimate of US GDP growth. The so-called "consensus" forecast of economists has predicted an anemic growth rate of 1.8%, but the actual growth rate fell to only 1.3%. You might recall that when the Commerce Department 3 months ago estimated the 1st quarter GDP growth rate at 1.8%, I predicated they would revise it downward, closer to 0%, and indeed they did revise it yesterday down to 1.4%. I predict that they will downgrade the 2nd quarter GDP growth rate from their initial estimate of 1.3% to close to 0% too.
Since GDP actually overstates national income by the amount of new investment that merely replaces old investment (sort of like calculating the income of a business without subtracting depreciation), in reality even aggregate national income isn't growing, and on a per-person basis it's clearly shrinking. We're not in any sort of recovery--we're living in the long-term recession state of the sort we haven't seen since the Great Depression.
We're likely to stay in the long-term recession economy too until the Federal Reserve Board stops inflating the money supply in a vain Keynesian attempt to trick the economy into real growth, and until we have a president and Congress willing to cut marginal income tax rates and at least slow the growth rate of federal spending.
Since GDP actually overstates national income by the amount of new investment that merely replaces old investment (sort of like calculating the income of a business without subtracting depreciation), in reality even aggregate national income isn't growing, and on a per-person basis it's clearly shrinking. We're not in any sort of recovery--we're living in the long-term recession state of the sort we haven't seen since the Great Depression.
We're likely to stay in the long-term recession economy too until the Federal Reserve Board stops inflating the money supply in a vain Keynesian attempt to trick the economy into real growth, and until we have a president and Congress willing to cut marginal income tax rates and at least slow the growth rate of federal spending.
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