Dude, Where's My Recession? The Series

June 5, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Employers continue to close their ears to the recession propagandists telling them that the economy is in a shambles. Initial jobless claims in the week that ended May 31 fell to 357,000 from 375,000, and the four-week average slid to 368,500 from 371,250. Such claims are usually way over 400,000 week after week during a full-blown contraction. The folks over at Action Economics point to a number of positive developments sure to hearten any bull:

The U.S. initial jobless claims drop to 357k in the final week of May, following yesterday's 40k May ADP gain [in private payrolls] and the upside May ISM NMI surprise at 51.7 despite a modest employment component correction, has put a positive spin on the employment indicators as we approach Friday's jobs report. Some upside surprises in today's retail chain store figures for May, and Wal-Mart's reference to its U.S. business as "strong," has also reinforced the notion that we will get a solid round of rebate-fueled retail sales figures for May despite the dismal vehicle figures, which probably were dominated by the disruptive effects of soaring gasoline prices and the American Axle strike.

Tags:
economy,
recession,
employment

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A quite amazingly stupid posting.

Domat of NY 7:52PM June 23, 2008

James,

Is all the negative talk really about employing the 1992 - "It's the economy stupid" - model of style over substance electioneering that dems seem to rely on in post-Kennedy presidential politics? If they aren't doing it on purpose, they should - it'll work - it always does.

Chris O of IL 1:06PM June 05, 2008

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Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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