‘US Jobs Boom Prompts Fears Federal Reserve May Call Time On Stimulus’ (Guardian)

(h/t reader M.G.:

“… here is an article from todays UK Guardian that ought to interest you. The Greedy Guts are upset because they fear their free ride on the backs of the US taxpayer in the $85 Billion a month bleed from the FED will go away because there is minimal growth in the real economy. Any good news for the real economy (and this isn’t very good, of the 195K jobs created, 75K are in hospitality, crap jobs) upsets them.
Here is the article. What awful people we have in power today.”

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And that brings us to a real unemployment rate of about 23%!!!

And now back to your regularly scheduled programming …


US jobs boom prompts fears Federal Reserve may call time on stimulus (Guardian, July 5, 2013):

Stock markets wobble as employment boom heightens jitters over central bank’s $85bn-a-month bond-buying programme

Last month, Bernanke said the US economy was improving but Washington’s budget cuts were stalling the recovery. Some business leaders and Republicans argue that the imposition of the president’s healthcare laws is slowing hiring, while Democrats say Republican-backed spending cuts are hurting the economy.

Responding to the latest monthly figures, Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House’s council of economic advisers, said: “In the four years since the recession ended in June 2009, the economy has added 5.3m jobs, thanks to the resilience of the American people and policies like the Recovery Act, which helped bring the recession to an end and put us on the path to recovery. With the recovery gaining traction, now is not the time for Washington to impose self-inflicted wounds on the economy.”

But Barack Obama’s opponents said his policies were holding back further growth in the jobs market. The Republican House speaker, John Boehner, said: “There’s some good news in this report, but economic growth is still tepid, the unemployment rate is far too high, and the president continues to promote policies that undermine robust job creation.

“Just look at the last few weeks: the president admits that his healthcare law is a drag on businesses; he threatens to veto a bill based on his own plan to make paying for college easier, then watches quietly as Senate Democrats let interest rates double; and he makes up new reasons to delay the Keystone pipeline in a speech about imposing a national energy tax.

“Imagine how many jobs would be created if the president stopped trying to expand government and started working with Republicans on policies that create sustained economic growth and expand opportunity for all Americans.”

The Bureau of Labour Statistics, which compiles the report, said leisure and hospitality added 75,000 jobs in June. Monthly job growth in this industry has averaged 55,000 in 2013, almost twice the median gain of 30,000 per month in 2012. Employment in professional and business services rose by 53,000 in June.

Employment in most other major industries, including mining and logging, construction, manufacturing, and transportation and warehousing, showed little change. The government continued to cut jobs during the month, shedding another 5,000 positions to comprise 65,000 in the past 12 months.

The number of long-term unemployed (those left jobless for 27 weeks or more) was essentially unchanged at 4.3m, accounting for 36.7% of the unemployed. Unemployment rates for teenagers (24%), black people (13.7%), and Hispanics (9.1%) remained stubbornly high.

Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at BTIG called the latest figures a “darn good report”. In a note to investors he highlighted a 0.4% rise in average hourly earnings, “tied for the highest rate of increase during the entire recovery. Finally, yes the unemployment rate did hold steady but it did so for all the right reasons. The number of unemployed people in the economy barely budged while the number of people working rose considerably,” he wrote.

On Wednesday, ADP, the payroll processor, said the private sector had added 188,000 jobs from May to June. The previous month’s tally was revised down marginally from 135,000 to 134,000.

The rise was across the economy, it said. Goods-producing employment rose by 27,000 jobs in June, the largest increase in four months. Construction payrolls rose by 21,000 in June, its biggest gain since January, and manufacturers added 1,000 jobs after a two-month decline.

Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, which helps compile the ADP report, said: “The job market continues to gracefully navigate through the strongly blowing fiscal headwinds. Healthcare reform does not appear to be significantly hampering job growth, at least not so far. Job gains are broad based across industries and businesses of all sizes.”

1 thought on “‘US Jobs Boom Prompts Fears Federal Reserve May Call Time On Stimulus’ (Guardian)”

  1. What a sick nation we have become where the stock market reacts negatively to any news that might benefit the real economy. 85% of all market activity is in High Frequency trades. That is when a few individuals controlling hundreds of millions in large funds buy and sell huge amounts of securities in less time than a person can blink their eyes. Only 15% of the market consists of real investors, decent people trying to plan for their retirement, or worse yet, depending on it for their old age.
    With the precedent set in Cypress, Spain and MF Global where the banks can go in and steal their money with no consequences, money left in the market is no longer safe. For those of us who grew up in a time when the stock market was a good reflection of the real economy, the rules have changed dramatically.
    Thanks for covering this story. The UK Guardian is still a free press, US media is a bought out corporate joke, and you may rest assured this story won’t be found in US news sites.
    Best,
    Marilyn Gjerdrum

    Reply

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