Posts tagged as:

gross domestic product

The components of residential investment in the fourth quarter GDP report (which is subject to revision, of course) is worth looking at more closely.

Single-family housing, which made up more than 3.5% of GDP at the peak, has declined precipitously, but registered a slight increase in the fourth quarter. Another driver of growth in residential investment was brokers’ commissions, which were sparked by the rapid rate of home sales. These drivers were offset by continued declines as a percentage of GDP in multi-family investment and residential improvements.

What should you read into the numbers? The recovery is in the timing; the new home and resale home market began its decline earlier than other segments of the residential investment economy. Improvements are driven partly by home values and partly by income; multi-family investment is driven by access to credit markets and property valuations.

Sustained improvement in the residential real estate market will help to drive increased investment in home improvements. The dynamic for the multi-family is somewhat more complex, but hinges to a large degree on stability in the employment markets.

9A70078C-AB55-46B5-9CCD-6DF81D70626A.jpg

Thanks to CalculatedRisk for the chart.

Share

{ 0 comments }

Martin Feldstein, the Harvard economist, today in the Wall Street Journal offers an attractively succinct and common-sense assessment of the effect of Obama administration programs on the economy.

A stimulus was needed, Feldstein writes. The problems was that it had the wrong emphasis.

The result was an unnecessarily large increase in the national debt for a very modest rise in gross domestic product, with too much emphasis on redistributing income and preserving public-sector jobs and not enough on raising economic activity. Only about one-fourth of the nearly $800 billion will be used for government spending that adds directly to GDP.

Simply focusing on the right things would have had much more impact, Feldstein says.

The flaw in the stimulus package wasn’t, as some say, that it was too small. It was that it was poorly targeted. Instead, Congress and the president could have gotten more stimulus from accelerating the repairing and replacing of equipment in the civilian and defense sectors. Long-term reductions in marginal tax rates of the type used by Presidents Kennedy and Reagan would also have been better than temporary tax cuts that have no positive incentive effects.

Feldstein doesn’t offer a solution, except to suggest that administration needs to shift its focus. The Congressional Budget Office recently completed a paper showing the impact different job stimulus initiatives could have on employment.

936D3DE0-05E6-4EF0-9421-002026998757.jpgThe chart to the right is from the director of the CBO’s blog and shows which initiatives would have the most significant impact on employment. A big impact would be from reducing payroll taxes. This effectively reduces the cost of having an employee. In theory, this is good for the government, for while the company would contribute less in tax, this decline would be offset by an increase in personal income tax.

But, in a faint echo of Feldstein’s comments, the CBO director has a caution. We’ve already run up a big bill with the stimulus programs and those bills have a price.

CBO concludes that further policy action, if properly designed, would promote economic growth and increase employment in 2010 and 2011. Different policies vary in cost-effectiveness as measured by the cumulative effects on GDP and employment per dollar of budgetary cost and in the time patterns of those effects. Moreover, despite the potential economic benefits in the short run, such actions would add to already large projected budget deficits. Unless offsetting actions were taken to reverse the accumulation of additional government debt, future incomes would tend to be lower than they otherwise would have been.

Share

{ 0 comments }

A global shift in GDP Market Share

November 24, 2009

An interesting, quick analysis of global GDP trends by Mark Perry, a University of Michigan professor, shows that on the big stage, the United States has held its share of economic production remarkably steady for the past 40 years.

Bottom Line: World GDP (real) doubled between 1969 and 1990, and has increased by another 60% since [...]

Share
0 comments Read the full article →

The impact of delevering

August 27, 2009

In a recent letter, economic observer John Mauldin discussed the impact of the system-wide deleveraging occuring across the the economy.
This shift marks the end of a 30-year period of growth driven by financial innovation.

The current rate of government borrowing is likely to keep total debt to GDP continue to rise, but consumers and businesses are [...]

Share
2 comments Read the full article →

The complex prospects for consumer consumption

July 7, 2009

Look at current commentary on the state of the economy and a few hot topics pop to the forefront. First, consumers: What will they spend, where will they spend it, what will they save and will they have jobs?
The folklore of our current plight is that a turbo-charged consumer drove the economic expansion [...]

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Share
0 comments Read the full article →