Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Four Different Viewpoints on Employment; Reflections on Biased Reporting Posted: 05 Aug 2012 10:26 PM PDT The latest jobs report showing a Gain of 163,000 on the Establishment Survey, But a Loss of 195,000 Jobs on the Household Survey got me to thinking about trends in employment. Much depends on your frame of reference. I can easily make numbers look good or bad, depending on how I want to present them. click on any chart for sharper image Civilian Employment Since 2011 That certainly looks quite robust, but is that the real sustainable trend? Here is another view. Civilian Employment Since 2007 Which trendline is correct? Civilian Employment Since 2007 - Different Perspective If I want to emphasize how poor the recovery has been, I just might use the above view. Notice that actual employment in 2008 was over 146 million. Employment fell to 138 million and has only taken back half of previous losses, making this the worst recovery on record. Civilian Employment Since 2011 Returning to the first chart, I just may want to emphasize that a trend change may be in the works. Indeed, I do think that is the case based on collapsing new orders. I have made the case numerous times.
Reflections on Biased Reporting The point of this post is not about trend changes, it is about presentation. I interpret the news and that introduces bias. Indeed, any commentary whatsoever about the news, by anyone, anywhere, anytime, introduces bias (intentional or not). The only way to not introduce bias is to present data with no comments, no trendlines, and no anecdotes. Who would read Calculated Risk, Big Picture, Zero Hedge, Naked Capitalism, Automatic Earth, Acting Man, Advisor Perspectives, Chris Martenson, or any other site if they did not offer opinions? What a dull blogging world it would be without opinions. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Aug 2012 09:52 AM PDT Space does not permit a complete discussion of zombified cities. Such a list would be in the many hundreds. Rather this post is about four cities in recent news that are among the walking dead. One is even a dumping ground for the dead. Fourth Financial Urgency in Miami in Four years The Huffington Post reports Miami Declares Financial Urgency For Fourth Year In A Row Miami City Manager Johnny Martinez declared a state of financial urgency Friday for the fourth year in a row.Click on link for a video. Detroit Becomes Dumping Ground for the Dead The Associated Press writes Vacant Detroit Becomes Dumping Ground for the Dead. From the street, the two decomposing bodies were nearly invisible, concealed in an overgrown lot alongside worn-out car tires and a moldy sofa. The teenagers had been shot, stripped to their underwear and left on a deserted block.How Pensions Crashed Stockton, San Bernardino Bloomberg reports Police Chief's $204,000 Pension Shows How Cities Crashed Stockton, California, Police Chief Tom Morris was supposed to bring stability to law enforcement when he was appointed to the job four years ago.Notice the complete ineptitude of San Bernardino City Councilwoman Wendy McCammack. She was willing to bankrupt San Bernardino by making untenable pension promises to "attract and retain" police officers. Did it work? Pension Time Bomb Explodes in Oakland The San Francisco Chronicle reports Oakland's financial time bomb: pensions It was 1976 when the city of Oakland realized it had a major problem on its hands: A pension created 25 years earlier to benefit police officers, firefighters and their widows was proving too costly to afford.Complete Idiocy by Councilwoman Pat Kernighan As stupid as the decision was by San Bernardino City Councilwoman (and it was incredibly stupid), the position of Oakland Councilwoman Pat Kernighan is much worse. Kernighan learned nothing from Stockton, San Bernardino, Miami, or Detroit. Nor did Kernighan even learn anything from prior history in Oakland. Borrowing has already wrecked Oakland and this complete dunce wants to do more of it. The only solution that has a chance is for Oakland to declare bankruptcy. Instead Kernighan voted to kick the can down the road one more time. Oakland Headed for Bankruptcy Oakland will not be in a better position in a few years. I confidently predict bankruptcy. Bankruptcy is the only method cities can use to correct absurd pension promises made to police, fire, and teachers' unions. Advice to Unions My beef is not with those lowest on the totem pole and their small $15,000 pensions. Instead, I propose those with the largest pensions should take the bulk of the hit. Police Chief Tom Morris lasted 8 months and will now receive a $204,000 annual pension. Morris deserves nothing, zero. My advice to unions is to negotiate with cities in advance of bankruptcy or some judge will come along and do something like slash pensions across the board by 50% as happened in Rhode Island. Across the board compromises give those like Morris far more than they deserve at the expense of hundreds of workers getting pensions barely enough to live on. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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