Today’s GDP report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis
revised the estimate for Q1 growth sharply downward, from 2.4 percent
to 1.8 percent. As the following chart shows, the revision makes the
rebound from the slowdown at the end of last year look less robust.
The
early estimates for each quarter are based on incomplete data
supplemented by extrapolations from historical trends, and revisions are
common. The revision announced today was larger than usual, however.
The average revision (without regard for sign) is 0.2 percentage points
from the second estimate to the third. This time it was 0.6 points. The
change from April's advance estimate of 2.5 percent was even larger. How
can we explain it? >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with charts and analysis of the latest GDP data
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Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Monday, June 24, 2013
The Economics of the Good Life: A Critique of Growth
In the first part of my review of Robert and Edward Skidelsky’s How Much is Enough?
I looked at the puzzle of leisure. Why, the Skidelskys ask, do we work
so hard, even when we are well enough off to afford the additional
leisure we need to live a good life? Beyond that follow some even more
important questions: What is a good life, anyway? Does endless
economic growth make it easier or harder to live a good life? What
kinds of public policy could help us live better? These questions
contain both economic and philosophical elements, a combination that the
Skidelsky team—the father, an economist, the son a philosopher—are
eminently qualified to take on. This second part of my review explores
some of their answers. >>>Read more
In the first part of my review of Robert and Edward Skidelsky’s How Much is Enough?
I looked at the puzzle of leisure. Why, the Skidelskys ask, do we work
so hard, even when we are well enough off to afford the additional
leisure we need to live a good life? Beyond that follow some even more
important questions: What is a good life, anyway? Does endless
economic growth make it easier or harder to live a good life? What
kinds of public policy could help us live better? These questions
contain both economic and philosophical elements, a combination that the
Skidelsky team—the father, an economist, the son a philosopher—are
eminently qualified to take on. This second part of my review explores
some of their answers. - See more at:
http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/24/growth-public-policy-and-the-economics-of-the-good-life/#sthash.mZ8YvuZg.dpuf
Monday, June 17, 2013
Solving the Mystery of Keynes' "Mistaken" Prediction: Why Don't we Work Less and Take More Leisure
Robert Skidelsky is best known for his definitive three-volume
biography of John Maynard Keynes. It hardly surprising, then, that he
begins his latest book, How Much is Enough? (co-authored
with his son, the philosopher Edward Skidelsky), with a puzzle posed by
the master himself. Why is it that we work so many hours each week and
enjoy so little leisure?
Keynes’ “mistaken” prediction
In 1928, Keynes gave a talk to a group of Cambridge undergraduates on the theme, “The Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren.” Eschewing models and data, his message was that if people were wise enough to avoid ruinous wars, those living a hundred years in the future would enjoy a standard of living four to eight times higher than those living in 1928. Here are some key passages that catch the flavor of his remarks:
Keynes’ “mistaken” prediction
In 1928, Keynes gave a talk to a group of Cambridge undergraduates on the theme, “The Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren.” Eschewing models and data, his message was that if people were wise enough to avoid ruinous wars, those living a hundred years in the future would enjoy a standard of living four to eight times higher than those living in 1928. Here are some key passages that catch the flavor of his remarks:
We may be on the eve of improvements in the efficiency of food production as great as those which have already taken place in mining, manufacture, and transport. In quite a few years—in in our own lifetimes I mean—we may be able to perform all the operations of agriculture, mining, and manufacture with a quarter of the human effort to which we have been accustomed. . . .
Thus for the first time since his creation man will be faced with his real, his permanent problem—how to use his freedom from pressing economic cares, how to occupy the leisure, which science and compound interest will have won for him, to live wisely and agreeably and well. . . .
Three-hour shifts or a fifteen-hour week . . . is quite enough to satisfy the old Adam in most of us!>>>Read more
Robert
Skidelsky is best known for his definitive three-volume biography of
John Maynard Keynes. It hardly surprising, then, that he begins his
latest book, How Much is Enough? (co-authored
with his son, the philosopher Edward Skidelsky), with a puzzle posed by
the master himself. Why is it that we work so many hours each week and
enjoy so little leisure?
Keynes’ “mistaken” prediction
In 1928, Keynes gave a talk to a group of Cambridge undergraduates on the theme, “The Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren.” Eschewing models and data, his message was that if people were wise enough to avoid ruinous wars, those living a hundred years in the future would enjoy a standard of living four to eight times higher than those living in 1928. Here are some key passages that catch the flavor of his remarks:
Keynes’ “mistaken” prediction
In 1928, Keynes gave a talk to a group of Cambridge undergraduates on the theme, “The Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren.” Eschewing models and data, his message was that if people were wise enough to avoid ruinous wars, those living a hundred years in the future would enjoy a standard of living four to eight times higher than those living in 1928. Here are some key passages that catch the flavor of his remarks:
We may be on the eve of improvements in the efficiency of food production as great as those which have already taken place in mining, manufacture, and transport. In quite a few years—in in our own lifetimes I mean—we may be able to perform all the operations of agriculture, mining, and manufacture with a quarter of the human effort to which we have been accustomed. . . .- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/17/how-much-is-enough-why-do-we-work-so-much-and-enjoy-so-little-leisure/#sthash.79FObQO3.dpuf
Thus for the first time since his creation man will be faced with his real, his permanent problem—how to use his freedom from pressing economic cares, how to occupy the leisure, which science and compound interest will have won for him, to live wisely and agreeably and well. . . .
Three-hour shifts or a fifteen-hour week . . . is quite enough to satisfy the old Adam in most of us!
Friday, June 14, 2013
Case Study in Hyperinflation: Venezuela on the Brink
The Central Bank of Venezuela recently reported an inflation rate for
May of 6.9 percent, equivalent to an annualized rate of more than 100
percent. Does this mean that Venezuela is on the brink of
hyperinflation? A quick look at the relevant economic concepts suggests
that hyperinflation is in fact a real danger.
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
... Orginally posted by Economonitor.com, site no longer active. See here for an updated (2018) version of this post.
The
Central Bank of Venezuela recently reported an inflation rate for May of
6.9 percent, equivalent to an annualized rate of more than 100 percent.
Does this mean that Venezuela is on the brink of hyperinflation? A
quick look at the relevant economic concepts suggests that
hyperinflation is in fact a real danger.
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
The
Central Bank of Venezuela recently reported an inflation rate for May of
6.9 percent, equivalent to an annualized rate of more than 100 percent.
Does this mean that Venezuela is on the brink of hyperinflation? A
quick look at the relevant economic concepts suggests that
hyperinflation is in fact a real danger.
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
The
Central Bank of Venezuela recently reported an inflation rate for May of
6.9 percent, equivalent to an annualized rate of more than 100 percent.
Does this mean that Venezuela is on the brink of hyperinflation? A
quick look at the relevant economic concepts suggests that
hyperinflation is in fact a real danger.
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
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The
Central Bank of Venezuela recently reported an inflation rate for May
of 6.9 percent, equivalent to an annualized rate of more than 100
percent. Does this mean that Venezuela is on the brink of
hyperinflation? A quick look at the relevant economic concepts suggests
that hyperinflation is in fact a real danger.What is hyperinflation and where does it come from?
Hyperinflation has a long history, but no official definition. In an influential 1956 paper, Phillip Cagan suggested limiting the term to a rate of inflation of 50 percent per month or more, which is equivalent to an annual compound rate of about 14,000 percent. That would fit extreme cases like Weimar Germany, Hungary after World War II, or, more recently, Zimbabwe, in which inflation rates reached millions or trillions of percent per year.
Although some economists still adhere to Cagan’s guideline, others prefer a more flexible definition. I like to apply the term hyperinflation to any case in which inflation seriously undermines the ability of money to serve its classic functions as a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange. That can begin to happen at rates of inflation of 100 percent per year or even less. Less extreme cases like Russia, Argentina, and Bulgaria in the 1990s would qualify, even though inflation reached only the low thousands of percent per year. Venezuela may well be approaching such an episode now.
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/14/venezuela-on-the-brink-of-hyperinflation/#sthash.Cex9VBxj.dpuf
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Breakup of the Ruble Area (1991-1993): A Cautionary Tale for the Euro
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia's pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
This is an updated version of a slideshow first published in January 2010. Click on the image to view the full updated slideshow
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
This is an updated version of a slideshow first published in January 2010. Click on the image to view the full updated slideshow
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia’s pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia’s pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia’s pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia’s pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
Good news: The euro crisis is over. At least that is how French President Francois Hollande sees it, according to remarks he made during his recent trip to Japan. Latvia’s pending entry is
another piece of news for the battered currency area. Never mind minor
problems like a deepening recession in many countries, unsustainable
government debts in others, and faltering export performance in still
others.
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
The good news/bad news situation of the euro should serve to remind us that currency areas do not necessarily last forever. The biggest currency area collapse in recent times was the fifteen-nation ruble area, which existed briefly following the breakup of the Soviet Union. It seems like a good time to update a little slideshow I wrote a few years ago on the breakup of the ruble area and its lessons for the euro.
Click on the image to view the full slideshow
- See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2013/06/12/breakup-of-the-ruble-area-1991-1993-a-cautionary-tale-for-the-euro/#sthash.XlgnucI0.dpuf
Monday, June 10, 2013
Why Latvia's Decision to Join the Euro Makes Sense
Last week’s convergence report
from the European Commission gave Latvia the green light to become the
eighteenth member of the eurozone as of next January. “The eurozone is
again a club with a queue–not at the exit but at the entrance,” crowed Herman Van Rompuy,
president of the European Council. “Joining the eurozone will foster
Latvia’s economic growth, for sure,” Latvian Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis
said in Riga. Yet Latvians on the street are less certain. Public
opinion polls show that only about 35 percent of respondents favor the
switch, and opposition parties that oppose the euro have done well in
recent local elections.
Who is right? Is it really a good idea for Latvia to sign on for membership in Europe’s troubled currency union? Let’s look at some of the factors that would make the answer “yes” or “no.”
Criteria for an optimal currency area
We can begin by setting Latvia and the euro to one side to look at the broader question of which countries or regions might benefit from common currencies. Imagine that we sit down with a blank outline map of the world and try to fill it in so that countries and regions that are better off sharing currencies are assigned the same color. We ask questions like these: Should Maryland and Virginia both use the dollar? If yes, color them both green. Should Russia and Ukraine both use the ruble? If yes, color them both red, and so on. When our map is finished, the regions with the same color—whether they are sovereign nations, groups of nations, or regions that overlap national borders—are what economists call optimal currency areas.>>>Read More
Who is right? Is it really a good idea for Latvia to sign on for membership in Europe’s troubled currency union? Let’s look at some of the factors that would make the answer “yes” or “no.”
Criteria for an optimal currency area
We can begin by setting Latvia and the euro to one side to look at the broader question of which countries or regions might benefit from common currencies. Imagine that we sit down with a blank outline map of the world and try to fill it in so that countries and regions that are better off sharing currencies are assigned the same color. We ask questions like these: Should Maryland and Virginia both use the dollar? If yes, color them both green. Should Russia and Ukraine both use the ruble? If yes, color them both red, and so on. When our map is finished, the regions with the same color—whether they are sovereign nations, groups of nations, or regions that overlap national borders—are what economists call optimal currency areas.>>>Read More
Friday, June 7, 2013
US Labor Market Shows Moderate Gains in May
The US labor market continued its gradual improvement in May. The
economy added 175,000 new payroll jobs, somewhat more than in March and
April, as shown in the following chart. Payroll job growth was strongest
in service sectors, with retail trade, professional and business
services, and leisure and hospitality all showing strong growth.
Construction added 7,000 jobs but those were offset by a decrease in
manufacturing jobs, so that there was no net job growth in the
goods-producing sectors. The addition of 13,000 local government jobs
helped to offset continued job cuts at the federal and state levels.
The household survey, which includes self-employed persons and farm workers, showed an increase of 319,000 jobs. Some 420,000 new workers entered or re-entered the labor force, bringing the employment-population ratio up slightly. Since the labor force increased by more than the number of employed workers, the number of unemployed also increased. The unemployment rate, which is the ratio of unemployed workers to the labor force, rose fractionally from 7.513 percent to 7.553 percent. That will be enough for news headlines, which usually show the unemployment rate rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, to report an increase from 7.5 to 7.6 percent. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with complete charts of the latest employment situation
The household survey, which includes self-employed persons and farm workers, showed an increase of 319,000 jobs. Some 420,000 new workers entered or re-entered the labor force, bringing the employment-population ratio up slightly. Since the labor force increased by more than the number of employed workers, the number of unemployed also increased. The unemployment rate, which is the ratio of unemployed workers to the labor force, rose fractionally from 7.513 percent to 7.553 percent. That will be enough for news headlines, which usually show the unemployment rate rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent, to report an increase from 7.5 to 7.6 percent. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow with complete charts of the latest employment situation
Monday, June 3, 2013
Corporate Profits Soar as Proprietors’ Income Stagnates: The Decline of Small Business and what to do about it.
Americans have long seen small businesses as the heart and soul of
their economy, but small firms have not fared well in recent years.
Corporations, in contrast, seem to be on a roll, with profits and stock
prices soaring to record highs. Is small business really in decline, and
if so, what should we do about it?
First, some data
One striking indication that small business is falling behind is the divergence between corporate profits and proprietors’ income. The trend is evident in data, shown in the following chart, that were released last week by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
It is true that the two series in the chart correspond only approximately to the popular distinction between big and small business. Proprietors’ income includes the current income of unincorporated businesses that have the legal forms of proprietorships, partnerships, and tax-exempt cooperatives. It does not perfectly match up with small firm size because some small firms are incorporated and some proprietorships, partnerships, and cooperatives are large. Also, proprietors’ income is not, in an economic sense, a pure measure of the profits of small businesses, since it includes the imputed income of small business owners who live off the net proceeds of their enterprises without paying themselves a salary or interest on funds they have loaned to their firms. >>>Read more
First, some data
One striking indication that small business is falling behind is the divergence between corporate profits and proprietors’ income. The trend is evident in data, shown in the following chart, that were released last week by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
It is true that the two series in the chart correspond only approximately to the popular distinction between big and small business. Proprietors’ income includes the current income of unincorporated businesses that have the legal forms of proprietorships, partnerships, and tax-exempt cooperatives. It does not perfectly match up with small firm size because some small firms are incorporated and some proprietorships, partnerships, and cooperatives are large. Also, proprietors’ income is not, in an economic sense, a pure measure of the profits of small businesses, since it includes the imputed income of small business owners who live off the net proceeds of their enterprises without paying themselves a salary or interest on funds they have loaned to their firms. >>>Read more