Sunday, January 8, 2012

Thirty Million Unemployed or Underemployed, Falling Real Wages, Euro Zone Survival Risk and World Economic Slowdown: Part I

Thirty Million Unemployed or Underemployed, Falling Real Wages, Euro Zone Survival Risk and World Economic Slowdown

Carlos M. Pelaez

© Carlos M. Pelaez, 2010, 2011

Executive Summary

I Thirty Million Unemployed or Underemployed

IA Summary of the Employment Situation

IB Number of People in Job Stress

IC Long-term and Cyclical Comparison of Employment

ID Creation of Jobs

II Falling Real Wages

III World Financial Turbulence

IIIA Financial Risks

IIIB Appendix on Safe Haven Currencies

IIIC Appendix on Fiscal Compact

IIID Appendix on European Central Bank Large Scale Lender of Last Resort

IIIE Appendix Euro Zone Survival Risk

IIIF Appendix on Sovereign Bond Valuation

IV Global Inflation

V World Economic Slowdown

VA United States

VB Japan

VC China

VD Euro Area

VE Germany

VF France

VG Italy

VH United Kingdom

VI Valuation of Risk Financial Assets

VII Economic Indicators

VIII Interest Rates

IX Conclusion

References

Appendix I The Great Inflation

References

Executive Summary

There are three important facts in the employment situation report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released on Fri Jan 6, 2012 for the month of Dec 2011: (1) the actual number unemployed or underemployed in the US is close to thirty million; (2) 130,500 jobs, or 61.1 percent of 220,000 private-sector jobs in the US are in temporary year-end holiday activities with low remuneration; and (3) inflation adjusted or real wages in the US have been falling since the beginning of 2011.

I Thirty Million in Job Stress. The foundation of the approach of evaluating the US labor market derives from Chart ES1 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics providing the level of the civilian labor force in the US. The civilian labor force consists of people who are available and willing to work and who have searched for employment recently. The labor force of the US grew from 143.800 million in Jan 2001 to 154.800 million in May 2009 but has declined to 153.887 million in Dec 2011. Chart ES1 shows the flattening of the curve of expansion of the labor force and its decline in 2010 and 2011. The key issue is whether the decline in participation of the population in the labor force is the result of people giving up on finding another job.

clip_image002

Chart ES1, US, Civilian Labor Force, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart ES2 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the number of people in part-time occupations because of economic reasons, that is, because they cannot find full-time employment. The number underemployed in part-time occupations rose from 3.332 million in Jan 2001 to 4.820 million in Oct 2004, falling to 3.900 million in Apr 2006. The number underemployed jumped to 9.130 million in Nov 2009, falling to 8.098 million in Dec 2011. The longer the period in part-time jobs the worst are the chances of finding another full-time job.

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Chart ES2, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Table ES1 consists of data and additional calculations using the BLS household survey, illustrating the possibility that the actual rate of unemployment could be 11.7 percent and the number of people in job stress could be between 29 and 30 million, which is 18.6 percent of the labor force. The first column provides for 2006 the yearly average population (POP), labor force (LF), participation rate or labor force as percent of population (PART %), employment (EMP), employment population ratio (EMP/POP %), unemployment (UEM), the unemployment rate as percent of labor force (UEM/LF Rate %) and the number of people not in the labor force (NLF). The numbers in column 2006 are averages in millions while the monthly numbers for Dec 2010 and Nov and Dec 2011 are in thousands, not seasonally adjusted. The average yearly participation rate of the population in the labor force was in the range of 66.0 percent minimum to 67.1 percent maximum between 2000 and 2006 with the average of 66.4 percent (ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/lf/aa2006/pdf/cpsaat1.pdf). The objective of Table ES1 is to assess how many people could have left the labor force because they do not think they can find another job. Row “LF PART 66.2 %” applies the participation rate of 2006, almost equal to the rates for 2000 to 2006, to the population in Dec 2010 and Nov and Dec 2011 to obtain what would be the labor force of the US if the participation rate had not changed. In fact, the participation rate fell to 64.1 percent by Dec 2010 and was 63.9 percent in Nov 2011 and 63.8 percent in Dec 2011, suggesting that many people simply gave up on finding another job. Row “∆ NLF UEM” calculates the number of people not counted in the labor force because they could have given up on finding another job by subtracting from the labor force with participation rate of 66.2 percent (row “LF PART 66.2%”) the labor force estimated in the household survey (row “LF”). Total unemployed (row “Total UEM”) is obtained by adding unemployed in row “∆NLF UEM” to the unemployed of the household survey in row “UEM.” The row “Total UEM%” is the effective total unemployed “Total UEM” as percent of the effective labor force in row “LF PART 66.2%.” The results are that: (1) there are an estimated 5.894 million unemployed in Dec who are not counted because they left the labor force on their belief they could not find another job (∆NLF UEM); (2) the total number of unemployed is effectively 18.586 million (Total UEM) and not 12.692 million (UEM) of whom many have been unemployed long term; (3) the rate of unemployment is 11.7 percent (Total UEM%) and not 8.3 percent, not seasonally adjusted, or 8.5 percent seasonally adjusted; and (4) the number of people in job stress is close to 30 million by adding the 5.894 million leaving the labor force because they believe they could not find another job. The row “In Job Stress” in Table ES1 provides the number of people in job stress not seasonally adjusted at 29.554 million in Dec 2011, adding the total number of unemployed (“Total UEM”), plus those involuntarily in part-time jobs because they cannot find anything else (“Part Time Economic Reasons”) and the marginally attached to the labor force (“Marginally attached to LF”). The final row of Table ES1 shows that the number of people in job stress is equivalent to 18.6 percent of the labor force. The employment population ratio “EMP/POP %” dropped from 62.9 percent on average in 2006 to 58.3 percent in Dec 2010, 58.7 percent in Nov 2011 and 58.5 percent in Nov 2011 and the number employed (EMP) dropped from 144 million to 140.7 million. What really matters for labor input in production and wellbeing is the number of people with jobs or the employment/population ratio, which has declined and does not show signs of increasing. There are almost four million fewer people working in 2011 than in 2006 and the number employed is not increasing. The number of hiring relative to the number unemployed measures the chances of becoming employed. The number of hiring in the US economy has declined by 17 million and does not show signs of increasing in an unusual recovery without hiring (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html).

Table ES1, US, Population, Labor Force and Unemployment, NSA

 

2006

Dec 2010

Nov 2011

Dec 2011

POP

229

238,889

240,441

240,584

LF

151

153,156

153,683

153,373

PART%

66.2

64.1

63.9

63.8

EMP

144

139,159

141,070

140,681

EMP/POP%

62.9

58.3

58.7

58.5

UEM

7

13,997

12,613

12,692

UEM/LF Rate%

4.6

9.1

8.2

8.3

NLF

77

85,733

86,757

87,212

LF PART 66.2%

 

158,145

159,172

159,267

NLF UEM

 

4,989

5,489

5,894

Total UEM

 

18,986

18,102

18,586

Total UEM%

 

12.0

11.4

11.7

Part Time Economic Reasons

 

9,205

8,271

8,428

Marginally Attached to LF

 

2,609

2,591

2,540

In Job Stress

 

30,800

28,964

29,554

People in Job Stress as % Labor Force

 

19.5

18.2

18.6

Pop: population; LF: labor force; PART: participation; EMP: employed; UEM: unemployed; NLF: not in labor force; NLF UEM: additional unemployed; Total UEM is UEM + NLF UEM; Total UEM% is Total UEM as percent of LF PART 66.2%; In Job Stress = Total UEM + Part Time Economic Reasons + Marginally Attached to LF

Note: the first column for 2006 is in average millions; the remaining columns are in thousands; NSA: not seasonally adjusted

The labor force participation rate of 66.2% in 2006 is applied to current population to obtain LF PART 66.2%; NLF UEM is obtained by subtracting the labor force with participation of 66.2 percent from the household survey labor force LF; Total UEM is household data unemployment plus NLF UEM; and total UEM% is total UEM divided by LF PART 66.2%

Sources: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

http://www.bls.gov/data/

II Temporary Jobs with Low Remuneration. Greater detail on the types of job created is provided in Table ES2 with SA data for Nov and Dec 2011. Rows B2a through B2e register job creation of 130,500 jobs, or 61.1 percent of total private-sector jobs, in categories that are typically growing during year-end holidays, which are characterized by relatively lower remuneration.

Table ES2, US, Employees on Nonfarm Payrolls and Selected Industry Detail, Thousands, SA

 

Nov 2011

Dec 2011

Change

A Total Nonfarm

131,700

131,900

200

B Total Private

109,716

109,928

212

B1 Goods Producing

18,111

18,159

48

B1a Construction

5,527

5,544

17

B1b Manufacturing

11,767

11,790

23

B2 Private Service Providing

91,605

91,769

164

B2a Wholesale Trade

5,552

5,564

11.6

B2b Retail Trade

14,659

14,687

27.0

B2c Couriers & Messengers

525.6

567.8

42.2

B2d Healthcare & Social Assistance

16,902

16,931

28.7

B2e Leisure & Hospitality

13,321

13,342

21

Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

III Falling Real Wages. Calculations with BLS data of inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings are shown in Table ES3. The final column of Table ES3 (“12 Month Real ∆%”) provides inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings of all employees in the US. Average hourly earnings rose above inflation throughout the first nine months of 2007 just before the global recession that began in the final quarter of 2007 when average hourly earnings lost to inflation. In contrast, average hourly earnings of all US workers have risen less than inflation in five months in 2010 and in all but one month in 2011 and the loss has accelerated to 1.5 percent in Nov 2011, which is the most recent month for which there are consumer price index data.

Table ES3, US, Average Hourly Earnings Nominal and Inflation Adjusted, Dollars and % NSA

 

AHE ALL

12 Month
Nominal
∆%

∆% 12 Month CPI

12 Month
Real ∆%

2007

       

Jan*

$20.70*

4.2*

2.1

2.1*

Feb*

$20.79*

4.1*

2.4

1.7*

Mar

$20.78

3.6

2.8

0.8

Apr

$20.85

3.5

2.6

0.7

May

$20.89

3.8

2.7

1.1

Jun

$21.00

3.8

2.7

1.1

Jul

$21.04

3.7

2.4

1.3

Aug

$21.03

3.5

1.9

1.6

Sep

$21.12

3.5

2.8

0.7

Oct

$21.11

3.1

3.5

-0.4

Nov

$21.17

3.3

4.3

-0.9

Dec

$21.27

3.4

4.1

-0.7

2010

       

Jan

$22.44

1.9

2.6

-0.7

Feb

$22.48

1.9

2.1

-0.2

Mar

$22.48

1.8

2.3

-0.5

Apr

$22.52

1.8

2.2

-0.4

May

$22.57

1.9

2.0

-0.1

Jun

$22.57

1.8

1.1

0.7

Jul

$22.61

1.8

1.2

0.6

Aug

$22.67

1.8

1.1

0.7

Sep

$22.70

1.7

1.1

0.6

Oct

$22.77

1.9

1.2

0.7

Nov

$22.76

1.7

1.1

0.6

Dec

$22.77

1.7

1.5

0.2

2011

       

Jan

$22.86

1.9

1.6

0.3

Feb

$22.88

1.8

2.1

-0.3

Mar

$22.89

1.8

2.7

-0.9

Apr

$22.93

1.8

3.2

-1.4

May

$23.02

2.0

3.6

-1.5

Jun

$23.01

1.9

3.6

-1.6

Jul

$23.12

2.3

3.6

-1.3

Aug

$23.08

1.8

3.8

-1.9

Sep

$23.13

1.9

3.9

-1.9

Oct

$23.20

1.9

3.5

-1.5

Nov

$23.20

1.9

3.4

-1.5

Dec

$23.24

2.1

   

Note: AHE ALL: average hourly earnings of all employees; CPI: consumer price index; Real: adjusted by CPI inflation; NA: not available

*AHE of production and nonsupervisory employees because of unavailability of data for all employees

Source: http://www.bls.gov/data/

ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/cpi/cpiai.txt

Chart ES2 provides 12-month percentage changes of average hourly earnings of all employees in constant dollars of 1982-1984, that is, adjusted for inflation. There was sharp contraction of inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings of US employees during parts of 2007 and 2008. Rates of change in 12 months became positive in parts of 2009 and 2010 but then became negative again in 2011.

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Chart ES2, Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees 12-Month Percent Change, 1982-1984 Dollars, 2007-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

I Thirty Million Unemployed or Underemployed. The employment situation report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of the US Department of Labor released in the first Friday of every month is critical in the analysis of social and economic conditions in the US. The objective of this section is to analyze the report released on Jan 6, 2012, for Dec 2011 (http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.toc.htm). This section is divided into four subsections. IA Summary of the Employment Situation provides the key data on employment, job creation and wages contained in the BLS report. These data are complemented by the BLS report on hiring, job openings and separations to be released on Jan 10 (http://www.bls.gov/jlt/), which will be analyzed in the blog comment of Jan 15. IB Number of People in Job Stress provides the calculation of people unemployed or underemployed in the US using the estimates of the BLS. IC Long-term and Cyclical Comparison of Employment provides the comparison with long-term and relevant cyclical experience in the US. ID Creation of Jobs analyzes the establishment survey of the BLS that provides job creation in nonfarm payrolls. Hourly and weekly earnings and hours worked are analyzed in the following section II Falling Real Wages.

IA Summary of the Employment Situation. Table I-1 provides the summary statistics of the employment situation report of the BLS. The first four rows provide the data from the establishment report of creation of nonfarm payroll jobs and remuneration of workers. New nonfarm payroll jobs created in Dec were 200,000, which is much higher than revised 100,000 created in Nov. New private payroll jobs created in Dec were 212,000, which is much higher than 120,000 created in Nov. Subsection D Job Creation analyzes the types of jobs created. Average hourly earnings in Dec 2011 were $23.24, increasing 2.1 percent relative to Dec 2010 and 0.2 percent relative to Nov 2011. In Nov 2011, average hourly earnings were $23.20, increasing 1.9 percent relative to Nov 2010 and zero relative to Oct 2011. These are nominal changes in worker wages. The following row “average hourly earnings in constant dollars” provides hourly wages in constant dollars. Data are not available for Dec because the prices indexes of the BLS for Dec will only be released in the middle of the Jan. The second column provides changes in real wages for Nov. Average hourly earnings adjusted for inflation or in constant dollars fell 1.4 percent in Nov 2011 relative to Nov 2010 and 0 relative to Oct 2011. The fractured labor market of the US is characterized by high levels of unemployment and underemployment together with falling real wages or wages adjusted for inflation. The following section II Falling Real Wages provides more detailed analysis. Average weekly hours of US workers are relatively constant at 34.4 in Dec 2011 compared with 34.3 in Nov 2011. Another headline number widely followed is the unemployment rate or number of people unemployed as percent of the labor force. The unemployment rate fell from 8.7 percent seasonally adjusted (SA) in Nov 2011 to 8.5 percent in Dec 2011. This blog provides with every employment situation report the number of people in the US in job stress or unemployed plus underemployed calculated without seasonal adjustment at 29.6 million in Dec 2011 and at 28.9 million in Nov 2011. The final row in Table I-1 provides the number in job stress as percent of the actual labor force at 18.6 percent in Dec 2011 and 18.2 percent in Nov 2011. The combination of high number of people in job stress, falling real wages and high number of people in poverty constitutes a socio-economic disaster.

Table I-1, US, Summary of the Employment Situation Report SA

 

Dec 2011

Nov 2011

New Nonfarm Payroll Jobs

200,000

100,000

New Private Payroll Jobs

212,000

120,000

Average Hourly Earnings

$23.24

∆% Dec 11/Dec 10: 2.1

∆% Dec 11/Nov 11: 0.2

$23.20

∆% Nov 11/Nov 10:  1.9

∆% Nov 11/Oct11: 0.0

Average Hourly Earnings in Constant Dollars

NA

$10.23

∆% Nov 2011/Nov 2010: -1.4

∆% Nov 2011/Oct 2011: 0.0

Average Weekly Hours

34.4

34.3

Unemployment Rate Household Survey % of Labor Force SA

8.5

8.7

Number in Job Stress Unemployed and Underemployed Blog Calculation

29.6 million NSA

28.9 million NSA

In Job Stress as % Labor Force

18.6

18.2

Source: Tables I-2, I-3, I-4, I-8, II-1 and II-3.

IB Number of People in Job Stress. There are two approaches to calculating the number of people in job stress. The first approach is calculating the number of people in job stress unemployed or underemployed with the raw data of the employment situation report as in Table I-2. The data are seasonally adjusted. The first three rows provide the labor force and unemployed in million and the unemployment rate of unemployed as percent of the labor force. There is significant decrease in the number unemployed from 13.759 million in Oct 2011 to 13.097 million in Dec or decline of 662,000. Thus, the rate of unemployment falls from 8.9 percent in Oct to 8.5 percent in Dec. Significant part of the decline in the rate of unemployment is explained by decrease in the labor force from 154.057 million in Oct to 153.887 million in Dec or by 170.000. An important aspect of unemployment is its persistence with 5.588 million in Dec who had been unemployed for 27 weeks or more, constituting 42.7 percent of the unemployed. The longer the period of unemployment the lower are the chances of finding another job. Another key characteristic of the current labor market is the high number of people trying to subsist with part-time job because they cannot find full-time employment or part-time for economic reasons. The number of part-time for economic reasons decreased from 8.790 million in Oct to 8.098 million in Dec or by 692,000. Another category consists of people marginally attached to the labor force who have sought employment at some point but believe there may not be another job for them. The number in job stress unemployed or underemployed of 23.735 million in Dec is composed of 13.097 million unemployed (of whom 5.588 million, or 42.7 percent, unemployed for 27 weeks or more) compared with 13.323 million unemployed in Nov (of whom 5.680 million, or 42.6 percent, unemployed for 27 weeks or more), 8.098 million employed part-time for economic reasons in Dec (who suffered reductions in their work hours or could not find full-time employment) compared with 8.469 million in Nov and 2.540 million who were marginally attached to the labor force in Dec (who were not in the labor force but wanted and were available for work) compared with 2.591 million in Nov. The final row in Table I-2 provides the number in job stress as percent of the labor force: 15.4 percent in Dec compared with 15.8 percent in Nov and 16.3 percent in Oct.

Table I-2, US, People in Job Stress, Millions and % SA

2011

Dec

Nov

Oct

Labor Force Millions

153.887

153.937

154.057

Unemployed
Millions

13.097

13.323

13.759

Unemployment Rate (unemployed as % labor force)

8.5

8.7

8.9

Unemployed ≥27 weeks
Millions

5.588

5.680

5.839

Unemployed ≥27 weeks %

42.7

42.6

42.4

Part Time Economic Reasons
Millions

∆ Dec/Nov:

-371 thousand

∆Dec/Oct: -692 thousand

8.098

8.469

8.790

Marginally
Attached to Labor Force
Millions

∆ Dec/Nov:

-51 thousand ∆ Dec/Oct: -15 thousand

2.540

2.591

2.555

Job Stress
Millions

∆ Dec/Nov                -648 thousand

∆ Dec /Oct               -1.369 million

23.735

24.383

25.104

In Job Stress as % Labor Force

15.4

15.8

16.3

Source

Job Stress = Unemployed + Part Time Economic Reasons + Marginally Attached Labor Force

Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

Table I-3 repeats the data in Table I-2 but including Sep and additional data. What really matters is the number of people with jobs or the total employed. The final row of Table I-3 provides people employed as percent of the population. The number has remained relatively constant around 58.5 percent.

Table I-3, US, Unemployment and Underemployment, SA, Millions and Percent

 

Dec

Nov

Oct

Sep

Labor Force

153.887

153.937

154.057

154.004

Unemployed

13.097

13.323

13.759

13.897

UNE Rate %

8.5

8.7

8.9

9.0

Part Time Economic Reasons

8.098

8.469

8.790

9.270

Marginally Attached to Labor Force

2.540

2.591

2.555

2.511

In Job Stress

23.735

24.383

25.104

25.678

In Job Stress % Labor Force

15.4

15.8

16.3

16.7

Employed

140.790

140.614

140.297

140.107

Employment % Population

58.5

58.5

58.4

58.4

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The second approach is considered in the balance of this subsection. Charts I-1 to I-12 explain the reasons for considering another approach to calculating job stress in the US. Chart I-1 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the level of employment in the US from 2001 to 2011. There was a big drop of the number of people employed from more than 146.320 million at the peak in Jan 2008 to 137.968 million at the trough in Dec 2009 with 8.352 million fewer people employed. Recovery has been anemic compared with the shallow recession of 2001 that was followed by nearly vertical growth in jobs. The number employed in Dec 2011 was 140.790 or 5.530 million fewer people with jobs.

clip_image008

Chart I-1, US, Employed, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-2 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides 12-month percentage changes of the number of people employed in the US from 2001 to 2011. There was recover in 2010 and 2011 but not sufficient to recovery lost jobs. There are many people in the US who had jobs before the global recession who are not working now.

clip_image010

Chart I-2, US, Employed, 12-Month Percentage Change, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The foundation of the second approach derives from Chart I-3 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics providing the level of the civilian labor force in the US. The civilian labor force consists of people who are available and willing to work and who have searched for employment recently. The labor force of the US grew from 143.800 million in Jan 2001 to 154.800 million in May 2009 but has declined to 153.887 million in Dec 2011. Chart 1-3 shows the flattening of the curve of expansion of the labor force and its decline in 2010 and 2011. The key issue is whether the decline in participation of the population in the labor force is the result of people giving up on finding another job.

clip_image002[1]

Chart I-3, US, Civilian Labor Force, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-4 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides 12-month percentage changes of the level of the labor force in the US. The rate of growth fell almost instantaneously with the global recession and became negative from 2009 to 2011. The labor force of the US collapsed and did not recover.

clip_image012

Chart I-4, US, Civilian Labor Force, Thousands, SA, 12-month Percentage Change, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-5 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the labor force participation rate in the US or labor force as percent of the population. The labor force participation rate of the US fell from 67.2 percent in Jan 2001 to around 66.2 percent in Jan 2008 and then to 64.0 percent in Dec 2011. Chart I-5 shows an evident downward trend beginning with the global recession that has continued throughout the recovery beginning in IIIQ2009. The critical issue is whether people left the workforce of the US because they believe there is no longer a job for them.

clip_image014

Chart I-5, Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, Percent of Population in Labor Force SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-6 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the level of unemployed in the US. The number unemployed rose from the trough of 6.727 million in Oct 2007 to the peak of 15.421 million in Oct 2009, declining to 13.097 million in Dec 2011.

clip_image016

Chart I-6, US, Unemployed, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-7 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the rate of unemployment in the US or unemployed as percent of the labor force. The rate of unemployment of the US rose from 4.2 percent in Jan 2001 to 6.2 percent in Jul 2003, declining to 4.4 percent in Mar 2007. The rate of unemployment jumped to 9.9 percent in both Nov and Dec 2009 and declined to 8.5 percent in Dec 2011.

clip_image018

Chart I-7, US, Unemployment Rate, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-8 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides 12-month percentage changes of the level of unemployed. There was a jump above 7.5 percent early in 2009 with subsequent decline and negative rates since 2010.

clip_image020

Chart I-8, US, Unemployed, 12-month Percentage Change, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-9 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the number of people in part-time occupations because of economic reasons, that is, because they cannot find full-time employment. The number underemployed in part-time occupations rose from 3.332 million in Jan 2001 to 4.820 million in Oct 2004, falling to 3.900 million in Apr 2006. The number underemployed jumped to 9.130 million in Nov 2009, falling to 8.098 million in Dec 2011. The longer the period in part-time jobs the worst are the chances of finding another full-time job.

clip_image004[1]

Chart I-9, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons, Thousands, SA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-10 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics repeats the behavior of unemployment. The 12-month rate of the level of people at work part-time for economic reasons jumped in 2009 and then declined subsequently. The declines have been insufficient to reduce significantly the number of people who cannot shift from part-time to full-time employment.

clip_image022

Chart I-10, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons 12-Month Percentage Change, NSA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-11 of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the same pattern of the number marginally attached to the labor force jumping to significantly higher levels during the global recession and remaining at historically high levels. The number marginally attached to the labor force increased from 1.295 million in Jan 2001 to 1.691 million in Feb 2004. The number of marginally attached to the labor force fell to 1.299 million in Sep 2006 and increased to 2.486 million in Dec 2009. The number marginally attached to the labor force was 2.540 million in Dec 2011.

clip_image024

Chart I-11, US, Marginally-Attached to the Labor Force, Thousands, NSA, 2001-2011

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-12 of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics provides 12-month percentage changes of the number of people marginally attached to the labor force. There was the same jump in 2009 followed by lower rates of increase but not enough negative percentage changes to erode the high levels.

clip_image026

Chart I-12, US, Marginally-Attached to the Labor Force 12-Month Percentage Change, NSA

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Table I-4 consists of data and additional calculations using the BLS household survey, illustrating the possibility that the actual rate of unemployment could be 11.7 percent and the number of people in job stress could be between 29 and 30 million, which is 18.6 percent of the labor force. The first column provides for 2006 the yearly average population (POP), labor force (LF), participation rate or labor force as percent of population (PART %), employment (EMP), employment population ratio (EMP/POP %), unemployment (UEM), the unemployment rate as percent of labor force (UEM/LF Rate %) and the number of people not in the labor force (NLF). The numbers in column 2006 are averages in millions while the monthly numbers for Dec 2010 and Nov and Dec 2011 are in thousands, not seasonally adjusted. The average yearly participation rate of the population in the labor force was in the range of 66.0 percent minimum to 67.1 percent maximum between 2000 and 2006 with the average of 66.4 percent (ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/lf/aa2006/pdf/cpsaat1.pdf). Table I-4b provides the yearly labor force participation rate from 2000 to 2011. The objective of Table I-4 is to assess how many people could have left the labor force because they do not think they can find another job. Row “LF PART 66.2 %” applies the participation rate of 2006, almost equal to the rates for 2000 to 2006, to the population in Dec 2010 and Nov and Dec 2011 to obtain what would be the labor force of the US if the participation rate had not changed. In fact, the participation rate fell to 64.1 percent by Dec 2010 and was 63.9 percent in Nov 2011 and 63.8 percent in Dec 2011, suggesting that many people simply gave up on finding another job. Row “∆ NLF UEM” calculates the number of people not counted in the labor force because they could have given up on finding another job by subtracting from the labor force with participation rate of 66.2 percent (row “LF PART 66.2%”) the labor force estimated in the household survey (row “LF”). Total unemployed (row “Total UEM”) is obtained by adding unemployed in row “∆NLF UEM” to the unemployed of the household survey in row “UEM.” The row “Total UEM%” is the effective total unemployed “Total UEM” as percent of the effective labor force in row “LF PART 66.2%.” The results are that: (1) there are an estimated 5.894 million unemployed in Dec who are not counted because they left the labor force on their belief they could not find another job (∆NLF UEM); (2) the total number of unemployed is effectively 18.586 million (Total UEM) and not 12.692 million (UEM) of whom many have been unemployed long term; (3) the rate of unemployment is 11.7 percent (Total UEM%) and not 8.3 percent, not seasonally adjusted, or 8.5 percent seasonally adjusted; and (4) the number of people in job stress is close to 30 million by adding the 5.894 million leaving the labor force because they believe they could not find another job. The row “In Job Stress” in Table I-4 provides the number of people in job stress not seasonally adjusted at 29.554 million in Dec 2011, adding the total number of unemployed (“Total UEM”), plus those involuntarily in part-time jobs because they cannot find anything else (“Part Time Economic Reasons”) and the marginally attached to the labor force (“Marginally attached to LF”). The final row of Table I-4 shows that the number of people in job stress is equivalent to 18.6 percent of the labor force. The employment population ratio “EMP/POP %” dropped from 62.9 percent on average in 2006 to 58.3 percent in Dec 2010, 58.7 percent in Nov 2011 and 58.5 percent in Nov 2011 and the number employed (EMP) dropped from 144 million to 140.7 million. What really matters for labor input in production and wellbeing is the number of people with jobs or the employment/population ratio, which has declined and does not show signs of increasing. There are almost four million fewer people working in 2011 than in 2006 and the number employed is not increasing. The number of hiring relative to the number unemployed measures the chances of becoming employed. The number of hiring in the US economy has declined by 17 million and does not show signs of increasing in an unusual recovery without hiring (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html).

Table I-4, US, Population, Labor Force and Unemployment, NSA

 

2006

Dec 2010

Nov 2011

Dec 2011

POP

229

238,889

240,441

240,584

LF

151

153,156

153,683

153,373

PART%

66.2

64.1

63.9

63.8

EMP

144

139,159

141,070

140,681

EMP/POP%

62.9

58.3

58.7

58.5

UEM

7

13,997

12,613

12,692

UEM/LF Rate%

4.6

9.1

8.2

8.3

NLF

77

85,733

86,757

87,212

LF PART 66.2%

 

158,145

159,172

159,267

NLF UEM

 

4,989

5,489

5,894

Total UEM

 

18,986

18,102

18,586

Total UEM%

 

12.0

11.4

11.7

Part Time Economic Reasons

 

9,205

8,271

8,428

Marginally Attached to LF

 

2,609

2,591

2,540

In Job Stress

 

30,800

28,964

29,554

People in Job Stress as % Labor Force

 

19.5

18.2

18.6

Pop: population; LF: labor force; PART: participation; EMP: employed; UEM: unemployed; NLF: not in labor force; NLF UEM: additional unemployed; Total UEM is UEM + NLF UEM; Total UEM% is Total UEM as percent of LF PART 66.2%; In Job Stress = Total UEM + Part Time Economic Reasons + Marginally Attached to LF

Note: the first column for 2006 is in average millions; the remaining columns are in thousands; NSA: not seasonally adjusted

The labor force participation rate of 66.2% in 2006 is applied to current population to obtain LF PART 66.2%; NLF UEM is obtained by subtracting the labor force with participation of 66.2 percent from the household survey labor force LF; Total UEM is household data unemployment plus NLF UEM; and total UEM% is total UEM divided by LF PART 66.2%

Sources: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Table I-4b, US, Labor Force Participation Rate, Percent of Labor Force in Population, NSA, 2000-2011

Year

Annual

2000

67.1

2001

66.8

2002

66.6

2003

66.2

2004

66.0

2005

66.0

2006

66.2

2007

66.0

2008

66.0

2009

65.4

2010

64.7

2011

64.1

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

IC Long-term and Cyclical Comparison of Employment. There is initial discussion here of long-term employment trends followed by cyclical comparison. Growth and employment creation have been mediocre in the expansion beginning in Jul IIIQ2009 from the contraction between Dec IVQ2007 and Jun IIQ2009 (http://www.nber.org/cycles.html). A series of charts from the database of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) provides significant insight. Chart I-13 provides the monthly employment level of the US from 1948 to 2011. The number of people employed has trebled. There are multiple contractions throughout the more than six decades but followed by resumption of the strong upward trend. The contraction after 2007 is deeper and followed by a flatter curve of job creation. Economic growth is much lower in the current expansion of 2.4 percent relative to average 6.2 percent in earlier contractions.

clip_image028

Chart I-13, US, Employment Level, Thousands, 1948-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The steep and consistent curve of growth of the US labor force is shown in Chart I-14. The contraction beginning in Dec 2007 flattened the path of the US civilian labor force and is now followed by a flatter curve during the expansion.

clip_image030

Chart I-14, US, Civilian Labor Force, 1948-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The civilian labor force participation rate, or labor force as percent of population, is provided in Chart I-15 for the period from 1948 to 2011. The labor force participation rate is influenced by numerous factors such as the age of the population. There is no comparable episode in the postwar economy to the sharp collapse of the labor force participation rate in Chart I-15 during the contraction and subsequent expansion after 2007. Aging can reduce the labor force participation rate as many people retire but many may have decided to work longer as their wealth and savings have been significantly reduced. There is an important effect of many people just exiting the labor force because they believe there is no job available for them.

clip_image032

Chart I-15, US, Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, 1948-2011, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number of unemployed in the US jumped from 5.8 million in May 1979 to 12.1 million in Dec 1982, by 6.3 million, or 108.6 percent. The number of unemployed jumped from 6.7 million in Mar 2007 to 15.6 million in Oct 2009, by 8.9 million, or 132.8 percent. These are the two episodes with steepest increase in the level of unemployment in Chart I-16.

clip_image034

Chart I-16, US, Unemployed, 1948-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-17 provides the rate of unemployment of the US from 1948 to 2011. The peak of the series is 10.8 percent in both Nov and Dec 1982. The second highest rates are 10.1 percent in Oct 2009 and 9.9 percent in both Nov and Dec 2009.

clip_image036

Chart I-17, US, Unemployment Rate, 1948-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-18 provides the number unemployed for 27 weeks and over from 1948 to 2011. The number unemployed for 27 weeks and over jumped from 510,000 in Dec 1978 to 2.9 million in Jun 1983, by 2.4 million, or 480 percent. The number of unemployed 27 weeks or over jumped from 1.1 million in May 2007 to 6.7 million in Jun 2010, by 5.6 million, or 509 percent.

clip_image038

Chart I-18, US, Unemployed for 27 Weeks or More, 1948-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The employment-population ratio in Chart I-19 is an important indicator of wellbeing in labor markets, measuring the number of people with jobs. The US employment-population ratio fell from 63.4 in Dec 2006 to 58.2 in Jul 2011 and stands at 58.5 in Dec 2011. There is no comparable decline during an expansion in Chart I-19.

clip_image040

Chart I-19, US, Employment-Population Ratio, 1948-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number of people at work part-time for economic reasons because they cannot find full-time employment is provided in Chart I-20. The number of people at work part-time for economic reasons jumped from 4.1 million in Sep 2006 to a high of 9.4 million in Sep 2010 and 9.3 million in Sep 2011, or by 5.2 million, or 127 percent. Earlier increases in the 1980s and after the tough recession of 1991 were followed by rapid decrease that is still absent in the current expansion. The drop by 371,000 of the seasonally-adjusted data from Nov to Dec while actual data without seasonal adjustment show an increase by 157,000 is not very credible.

clip_image042

Chart I-20, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons, 1948-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Table I-5 provides percentage change in real GDP in the United States in the 1930s, 1980s and 2000s. The recession in 1981-1982 is quite similar on its own to the 2007-2009 recession. In contrast, during the Great Depression in the four years of 1930 to 1933, GDP in constant dollars fell 26.7 percent cumulatively and fell 45.6 percent in current dollars (Pelaez and Pelaez, Financial Regulation after the Global Recession (2009a), 150-2, Pelaez and Pelaez, Globalization and the State, Vol. II (2009b), 205-7). Data are available for the 1930s only on a yearly basis. US GDP fell 4.8 percent in the two recessions from IQ1980 to IIIQ1980 and from III1981 to IVQ1981 to IVQ1982 and 5.1 percent cumulatively in the recession from IVQ2007 to IIQ2009.

Table I-5, US, Percentage Change of GDP in the 1930s, 1980s and 2000s, ∆%

Year

GDP ∆%

Year

GDP ∆%

Year

GDP ∆%

1930

-8.6

1980

-0.3

2000

4.1

1931

-6.5

1981

2.5

2001

1.1

1932

-13.1

1982

-1.9

2002

1.8

1933

-1.3

1983

4.5

2003

2.5

1934

10.9

1984

7.2

2004

3.5

1935

8.9

1985

4.1

2005

3.1

1936

13.1

1986

3.5

2006

2.7

1937

5.1

1987

3.2

2007

1.9

1938

-3.4

1988

4.1

2008

-0.3

1930

8.1

1989

3.6

2009

-3.5

1940

8.8

1990

1.9

2010

3.0

Source: http://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm

Characteristics of the four cyclical sharp contractions are provided in Table I-6 with the first column showing the number of quarters of contraction; the second column the cumulative percentage contraction; and the final column the average quarterly rate of contraction in annual equivalent rate. There were two contractions from IQ1980 to IIIQ1980 and from IIIQ1981 to IVQ1982 separated by three quarters of expansion. The drop of output combining the declines in these two contractions is 4.8 percent, which is almost equal to the decline of 5.1 percent in the contraction from IVQ2007 to IIQ2009. In contrast, during the Great Depression in the four years of 1930 to 1933, GDP in constant dollars fell 26.7 percent cumulatively and fell 45.6 percent in current dollars (Pelaez and Pelaez, Financial Regulation after the Global Recession (2009a), 150-2, Pelaez and Pelaez, Globalization and the State, Vol. II (2009b), 205-7). The comparison of the global recession after 2007 with the Great Depression is entirely misleading.

Table I-6, US, Number of Quarters, Cumulative Percentage Contraction and Average Percentage Annual Equivalent Rate in Cyclical Contractions 

 

Number of Quarters

Cumulative Percentage Contraction

Average Percentage Annual Equivalent Rate

IIQ1953 to IIQ1954

4

-2.5

-0.63

IIIQ1957 to IIQ1958

3

-3.1

-9.0

IQ1980 to IIIQ1980

2

-2.2

-1.1

IIIQ1981 to IVQ1982

4

-2.7

-0.67

IVQ2007 to IIQ2009

6

-5.1

-0.87

Source: Business Cycle Reference Dates: http://www.nber.org/cycles/cyclesmain.html

Data: http://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm

Table I-7 shows the extraordinary contrast between the mediocre average annual equivalent growth rate of 2.4 percent of the US economy in the nine quarters of the current cyclical expansion and the average of 6.2 percent in the four earlier cyclical expansions. The BEA data for the three quarters of 2011 show the economy in standstill with annual equivalent growth of 1.1 percent. The expansion of IQ1983 to IVQ1985 was at the average annual growth rate of 5.7 percent.

Table I-7, US, Number of Quarters, Cumulative Growth and Average Annual Equivalent Growth Rate in Cyclical Expansions

 

Number
of
Quarters

Cumulative Growth

∆%

Average Annual Equivalent Growth Rate

IIIQ 1954 to IQ1957

11

12.6

4.4

IIQ1958 to IIQ1959

5

10.2

8.1

IIQ1975 to IVQ1976

8

9.5

4.6

IQ1983 to IV1985

13

19.6

5.7

Average Four Above Expansions

   

6.2

IIIQ2009 to IIIQ2011

9

5.5

2.4

Source: http://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm

A group of charts from the database of the Bureau of Labor Statistics facilitate the comparison of employment in the 1980s and 2000s. The long-term charts and tables from I-5 to I-7 in the discussion above confirm the view that the comparison of the current expansion should be with that in the 1980s because of similar dimensions. Chart I-21 provides the level of employment in the US between 1979 and 1989. Employment surged after the contraction and grew rapidly during the decade.

clip_image044

Chart I-21, US, Employed, Thousands, 1979-1989

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number employed in the US fell from 146.595 million in Nov 2007 to 140.790 million in Dec 2011, by 5.805 million, or 3.9 percent. Chart I-22 shows tepid recovery early in 2010 followed by near stagnation.

clip_image008[1]

Chart I-22, US, Employed, Thousands, 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

There was a steady upward trend in growth of the civilian labor force between 1979 and 1989 as shown in Chart I-23. There were fluctuations but strong long-term dynamism over an entire decade.

clip_image046

Chart I-23, US, Civilian Labor Force, Thousands, 1979-1989

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The civilian labor force in Chart I-24 grew steadily on an upward trend in the 2000s until it contracted together with the economy after 2007. There has not been recovery during the expansion but rather decline.

clip_image002[2]

Chart I-24, US, Civilian Labor Force, Thousands, 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The rate of participation of the labor force in population stagnated during the stagflation and conquest of inflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s, as shown in Chart I-25. Recovery was vigorous during the expansion and lasted through the remainder of the decade.

clip_image048

Chart I-25, US, Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, 1979-1989, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The rate of participation in the labor force declined after the recession of 2001 and stagnated until 2007, as shown in Chart I-26. The rate of participation in the labor force continued to decline both during the contraction after 2007 and the expansion after 2009.

clip_image014[1]

Chart I-26, US, Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate, 2001-2011, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-27 provides the number unemployed during the 1980s. The number unemployed peaked at 12.051 million in Dec 1982, declining to 8.358 million in Dec 1984 during the first two years of expansion from the contraction. The number unemployed then fell to 6.667 million in Dec 1989.

clip_image050

Chart I-27, US, Unemployed Thousands 1979-1989

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart I-28 provides the number unemployed from 2001 to 2011. The number unemployed rose from 6.727 million in Oct 2006 to 15.421 million in Oct 2009, declining to 13.097 million in Dec 2011.

clip_image016[1]

Chart I-28, US, Unemployed Thousands 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The rate of unemployment peaked at 10.8 percent in both Nov and Dec 1982, as shown in Chart I-29. The rate of unemployment dropped sharply during the expansion after 1984 and continued to decline during the rest of the decade to 5.4 percent in Dec 1989.

clip_image052

Chart I-29, US, Unemployment Rate, 1979-1989, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The rate of unemployment in the US jumped from 4.4 percent in May 2007 to 10.0 percent in Oct 2009 and 9.9 percent in both Nov and Dec 2009, as shown in Chart I-30. The rate of unemployment fluctuated at around 9.0 percent in 2011 with the somewhat less credible 8.7 percent in Nov 2011 because of the decrease of the labor force by 120,000 from Oct to Nov and then decline to 8.5 percent in Dec 2011 with decline of 50,000 of the labor force from Nov to Dec.

clip_image018[1]

Chart I-30, US, Unemployment Rate, 2001-2011, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The employment population ratio fell from around 60.1 in Dec 1979 to 57.1 in both Feb and Mar 1983, as shown in Chart I-31. The employment population ratio rose back to 59.9 in Dec 1984 and reached 63.0 later in the decade in Dec 1989.

clip_image054

Chart I-31, US, Employment Population Ratio, 1979-1989, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The US employment-population ratio has fallen from 63.4 in Dec 2006 to 58.5 in Dec 2011, as shown in Chart I-32. The employment population-ratio has stagnated during the expansion.

clip_image056

Chart I-32, US, Employment Population Ratio, 2001-2011, %

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number unemployed for 27 weeks or over peaked at 2.885 million in Jun 1983 as shown in Chart I-33. The number unemployed for 27 weeks or over fell sharply during the expansion to 1.393 million in Dec 1984 and continued to decline throughout the 1980s to 0.635 million in Dec 1989.

clip_image058

Chart I-33, US, Number Unemployed for 27 Weeks or More 1979-1989, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number unemployed for 27 weeks or over rose sharply during the contraction as shown in Chart I-34 from 1.131 million in Nov 2006 to 6.730 in Apr 2010. The number of unemployed for 27 weeks remained at around 6 million during the expansion compared with somewhat above 1 million before the contraction.

clip_image060

Chart I-34, US, Number Unemployed for 27 Weeks or More, 2001-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number of persons working part-time for economic reasons because they cannot find full-time work peaked during the contraction at 6.857 million in Oct 1982, as shown in Chart I-35. The number of persons at work part-time for economic reasons fell sharply during the expansion to 5.797 million in Dec 1984 and continued to fall throughout the decade to 4.817 million in Dec 1989.

clip_image062

Chart I-35, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons, 1979-1989, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number of people working part-time because they cannot find full-time employment rose sharply during the contraction from 3.972 million in Mar 2006 to 9.130 million in Nov 2009, as shown in Chart I-36. The number of people working part-time because of failure to find an alternative occupation stagnated at a very high level during the expansion.

clip_image004[2]

Chart I-36, US, Part-Time for Economic Reasons, 2001-2011, Thousands

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The number marginally attached to the labor force in Chart I-37 jumped from 1.252 million in Dec 2006 to 2.730 million in Feb 2011, remaining at a high level of 2.540 million in Dec 2011.

clip_image024[1]

Chart I-37, US, Marginally Attached to the Labor Force, 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Total nonfarm payroll employment seasonally adjusted (SA) rose 200,000 in Dec and private payroll employment rose by 212,000. Table I-8 provides the monthly change in jobs seasonally adjusted in the prior strong contraction of 1981-1982 and the recovery in 1983 into 1984 and in the contraction of 2008-2009 and in the recovery in 2009 to 2011. All revisions have been incorporated in Table I-8. The data in the recovery periods are in relief to facilitate comparison. There is significant bias in the comparison. The average yearly civilian noninstitutional population was 174.2 million in 1983 and the civilian labor force 111.6 million, growing by 2009 to an average yearly civilian noninstitutional population of 235.8 million and civilian labor force of 154.1 million, that is, increasing by 35.4 percent and 38.1 percent, respectively (http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat1.pdf). Total nonfarm payroll jobs in 1983 were 90.280 million, jumping to 94.530 million in 1984 while total nonfarm jobs in 2010 were 129.818 million declining from 130.807 million in 2009 (http://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cesbtab1.htm ). What is striking about the data in Table I-8 is that the numbers of monthly increases in jobs in 1983 and 1984 are several times higher than in 2010 to 2011 even with population higher by 35.4 percent and labor force higher by 38.1 percent in 2009 relative to 1983 nearly three decades ago and total number of jobs in payrolls rose by 39.5 million in 2010 relative to 1983 or by 43.8 percent.. Growth has been mediocre in the nine quarters of expansion beginning in IIIQ2009 in comparison with earlier expansions (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/slow-growth-falling-real-disposable.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/11/us-growth-standstill-falling-real.html) and also in terms of what is required to reduce the job stress of at least 25 million persons but likely close to 30 million. Some of the job growth and contraction in 2010 in Table I-8 is caused by the hiring and subsequent layoff of temporary workers for the 2010 census.

Table I-8, US, Monthly Change in Jobs, Number SA

Month

1981

1982

1983

2008

2009

2010

Private

Jan

95

-327

225

13

-820

-39

-42

Feb

67

-6

-78

-83

-726

-35

-21

Mar

104

-129

173

-72

-796

192

144

Apr

74

-281

276

-185

-660

277

229

May

10

-45

277

-233

-386

458

48

Jun

196

-243

378

-178

-502

-192

65

Jul

112

-343

418

-231

-300

-49

93

Aug

-36

-158

-308

-267

-231

-59

110

Sep

-87

-181

1114

-434

-236

-29

109

Oct

-100

-277

271

-509

-221

171

143

Nov

-209

124

352

-802

-55

93

128

Dec

-278

-14

356

-619

-130

152

167

     

1984

   

2011

Private

Jan

   

447

   

68

94

Feb

   

479

   

235

261

Mar

   

275

   

194

219

Apr

   

363

   

217

241

May

   

308

   

53

99

Jun

   

379

   

20

75

Jul

   

312

   

127

173

Aug

   

241

   

104

72

Sep

   

311

   

210

220

Oct

   

286

   

112

134

Nov

   

349

   

100

120

Dec

   

127

   

200

212

Source: http://www.bls.gov/data/#employment http://data.bls.gov/PDQ/servlet/SurveyOutputServlet

http://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cesbtab1.htm

http://www.bls.gov/schedule/archives/empsit_nr.htm#2010

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

Charts numbered from 23 to 26 from the database of the Bureau of Labor Statistics provide a comparison of payroll survey data for the contractions and expansions in the 1980s and after 2007. Chart I-38 provides total nonfarm payroll jobs from 2001 to 2011. The sharp decline in total nonfarm jobs during the contraction after 2007 has been followed by initial stagnation and then tepid growth.

clip_image064

Chart I-38, US, Total Nonfarm Payroll Jobs SA 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/data/

Total nonfarm payroll jobs grew rapidly during the expansion in 1983 and 1984 as shown in Chart I-39. Nonfarm payroll jobs continued to grow at high rates during the remainder of the 1980s.

clip_image066

Chart I-39, US, Total Nonfarm Payroll Jobs SA 1979-1989

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Most job creation in the US is by the private sector. Chart I-40 shows the sharp destruction of private payroll jobs during the contraction after 2007. There has been growth after 2010 but insufficient to recover higher levels of employment prevailing before the contraction. At current rates, recovery of employment may spread over several years in contrast with past expansions of the business cycle in the US.

clip_image068

Chart I-40, US, Total Private Payroll Jobs SA 2001-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/data/

In contrast, growth of private payroll jobs in the US recovered vigorously during the expansion in 1983 through 1985, as shown in Chart I-41. Rapid growth of creation of private jobs continued throughout the 1980s.

clip_image070

Chart I-41, US, Total Private Payroll Jobs SA 1979-1989

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/data/

ID Creation of Jobs. Types of job created and not only the rhythm of job creation may be important. Important aspects of growth of payroll jobs from Nov 2010 to Nov 2011, not seasonally adjusted (NSA), are provided in Table I-9. Total nonfarm employment increased by 1,671,000 (row A, column Change), consisting of growth of total private employment by 1,932,000 (row B, column Change) and decline by 271,000 of government employment (row C, column Change). Monthly average growth of private payroll employment has been 161,000, which is mediocre relative to 25 to 30 million in job stress, while total nonfarm employment has grown on average by only 139,250 per month. These monthly rates of job creation are insufficient to meet the demands of new entrants in the labor force and thus perpetuate unemployment and underemployment. Manufacturing employment increased by 218,000, at the monthly rate of 18,167, while private service providing employment grew by 1,574,000, at the monthly rate of 131,167. The employment situation report states: “Employment in professional and business services changed little in December for the second month in a row. The industry added 42,000 jobs per month on average, during the first 10 months of 2011” (http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf 3).An important feature in Table I-9 is that jobs in professional and business services increased by 446,000 with temporary help services increased by 98,000. This episode of jobless recovery is characterized by part-time jobs and creation of jobs that are inferior to those that have been lost. Monetary and fiscal stimuli fail to increase consumption in a fractured job market. An important characteristic is that the losses of government jobs have been high in local government, 170,000 jobs lost in that past twelve months (row C3 Local), because of the higher number of employees in local government, 14.3 million relative to 5.2 million in state jobs and 2.8 million in federal jobs.

Table I-9, US, Employees in Nonfarm Payrolls Not Seasonally Adjusted in Thousands

 

Dec 2010

Dec 2011

Change

A Total Nonfarm

131,050

132,721

1,671

B Total Private

108,464

110,396

1,932

B1 Goods Producing

17,714

18,072

358

B1a

Manufacturing

11,594

11,812

218

B2 Private service providing

90,750

92,324

1,574

B2a Wholesale Trade

5,496

5,576

80

B2b Retail Trade

14,939

15,199

260

B2c Transportation & Warehousing

4,338

4,414

76

B2d Financial Activities

7,625

7,633

8

B2e Professional and Business Services

17,034

17,480

446

B2e1 Temporary help services

2,314

2,412

98

B2f Health Care & Social Assistance

16,630

16,979

349

B2g Leisure & Hospitality

12,749

13,008

259

C Government

22,586

22,325

-261

C1 Federal

2,846

2,812

-34

C2 State

5,250

5,193

-57

C3 Local

14,490

14,320

-170

Note: A = B+C, B = B1 + B2, C=C1 + C2 + C3

Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

Greater detail on the types of job created is provided in Table I-10 with SA data for Nov and Dec 2011. Rows B2a through B2e register job creation of 130,500 jobs, or 61.1 percent of total private-sector jobs, in categories that are typically growing during year-end holidays, which are characterized by relatively lower remuneration.

Table I-10, US, Employees on Nonfarm Payrolls and Selected Industry Detail, Thousands, SA

 

Nov 2011

Dec 2011

Change

A Total Nonfarm

131,700

131,900

200

B Total Private

109,716

109,928

212

B1 Goods Producing

18,111

18,159

48

B1a Construction

5,527

5,544

17

B1b Manufacturing

11,767

11,790

23

B2 Private Service Providing

91,605

91,769

164

B2a Wholesale Trade

5,552

5,564

11.6

B2b Retail Trade

14,659

14,687

27.0

B2c Couriers & Messengers

525.6

567.8

42.2

B2d Healthcare & Social Assistance

16,902

16,931

28.7

B2e Leisure & Hospitality

13,321

13,342

21

Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

The NBER dates recessions in the US from peaks to troughs as: IQ80 to IIIQ80, IIIQ81 to IV82 and IVQ07 to IIQ09 (http://www.nber.org/cycles/cyclesmain.html). Table I-11 provides total annual level nonfarm employment in the US for the 1980s and the 2000s, which is different from 12 months comparisons. Nonfarm jobs rose by 4.853 million in 1982 to 1984, or 5.4 percent, and continued rapid growth in the rest of the decade. In contrast, nonfarm jobs are down by 7.780 million in 2010 relative to 2007 and fell by 989,000 in 2010 relative to 2009 even after six quarters of GDP growth. Monetary and fiscal stimuli have failed in increasing growth to rates required for mitigating job stress. The initial growth impulse reflects a flatter growth curve in the current expansion.

Table I-11, US, Total Nonfarm Employment in Thousands

Year

Total Nonfarm

Year

Total Nonfarm

1980

90,528

2000

131,785

1981

91,289

2001

131,826

1982

89,677

2002

130,341

1983

90,280

2003

129,999

1984

94,530

2004

131,435

1985

97,511

2005

133,703

1986

99,474

2006

136,086

1987

102,088

2007

137,598

1988

105,345

2008

136,790

1989

108,014

2009

130,807

1990

109,487

2010

129,818

Source: http://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cesbtab1.htm

The highest average yearly percentage of unemployed to the labor force since 1940 was 14.6 percent in 1940 followed by 9.9 percent in 1941, 8.5 percent in 1975, 9.7 percent in 1982 and 9.6 percent in 1983 (ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/lf/aa2006/pdf/cpsaat1.pdf). The rate of unemployment remained at high levels in the 1930s, rising from 3.2 percent in 1929 to 22.9 percent in 1932 in one estimate and 23.6 percent in another with real wages increasing by 16.4 percent (Margo 1993, 43; see Pelaez and Pelaez, Regulation of Banks and Finance (2009b), 214-5). There are alternative estimates of 17.2 percent or 9.5 percent for 1940 with real wages increasing by 44 percent. Employment declined sharply during the 1930s. The number of hours worked remained in 1939 at 29 percent below the level of 1929 (Cole and Ohanian 1999). Private hours worked fell in 1939 to 25 percent of the level in 1929. The policy of encouraging collusion through the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), to maintain high prices, together with the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), to maintain high wages, prevented the US economy from recovering employment levels until Roosevelt abandoned these policies toward the end of the 1930s (for review of the literature analyzing the Great Depression see Pelaez and Pelaez, Regulation of Banks and Finance (2009b), 198-217).

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) makes yearly revisions of its establishment survey (Harris 2011BA):

“With the release of data for January 2011, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) introduced its annual revision of national estimates of employment, hours, and earnings from the Current Employment Statistics (CES) monthly survey of nonfarm establishments.  Each year, the CES survey realigns its sample-based estimates to incorporate universe counts of employment—a process known as benchmarking.  Comprehensive counts of employment, or benchmarks, are derived primarily from unemployment insurance (UI) tax reports that nearly all employers are required to file with State Workforce Agencies.”

The number of not seasonally adjusted total private jobs in the US in Dec 2010 is 108.464 million, declining to 106.079 million in Jan 2011, or by 2.385 million, because of the adjustment of a different benchmark and not actual job losses. The not seasonally adjusted number of total private jobs in Dec 1984 is 80.250 million, declining to 78.704 million in Jan 1985, or by 1.546 million for the similar adjustment. Table I-12 attempts to measure job losses and gains in the recessions and expansions of 1981-1985 and 2007-2011. The final ten rows provide job creation from May 1983 to May 1984 and from May 2010 to May 2011, that is, at equivalent stages of the recovery from two comparable strong recessions. The row “Change ∆%” for May 1983 to May 1984 shows an increase of total nonfarm jobs by 4.9 percent and of 5.9 percent for total private jobs. The row “Change ∆%” for May 2010 to May 2011 shows an increase of total nonfarm jobs by 0.7 percent and of 1.7 percent for total private jobs. The last two rows of Table 7 provide a calculation of the number of jobs that would have been created from May 2010 to May 2011 if the rate of job creation had been the same as from May 1983 to May 1984. If total nonfarm jobs had grown between May 2010 and May 2011 by 4.9 percent, as between May 1983 and May 1984, 6.409 million jobs would have been created in the past 12 months for a difference of 5.457 million more total nonfarm jobs relative to 0.952 million jobs actually created. If total private jobs had grown between May 2010 and May 2011 by 5.9 percent as between May 1983 and May 1984, 6.337 million private jobs would have been created for a difference of 4.539 million more total private jobs relative to 1.798 million jobs actually created.

Table I-12, US, Total Nonfarm and Total Private Jobs Destroyed and Subsequently Created in Two Recessions IIIQ1981-IVQ1982 and IVQ2007-IIQ2009, Thousands and Percent

 

Total Nonfarm Jobs

Total Private Jobs

06/1981 #

92,288

75,969

11/1982 #

89,482

73,260

Change #

-2,806

-2,709

Change ∆%

-3.0

-3.6

12/1982 #

89,383

73,185

05/1984 #

94,471

78,049

Change #

5,088

4,864

Change ∆%

5.7

6.6

11/2007 #

139,090

116,291

05/2009 #

131,626

108,601

Change %

-7,464

-7,690

Change ∆%

-5.4

-6.6

12/2009 #

130,178

107,338

05/2011 #

131,753

108,494

Change #

1,575

1,156

Change ∆%

1.2

1.1

05/1983 #

90,005

73,667

05/1984 #

94,471

78,049

Change #

4,466

4,382

Change ∆%

4.9

5.9

05/2010 #

130,801

107,405

05/2011 #

131,753

109,203

Change #

952

1,798

Change ∆%

0.7

1.7

Change # by ∆% as in 05/1984 to 05/1985

6,409*

6,337**

Difference in Jobs that Would Have Been Created

5,457 =
6,409-952

4,539 =
6,337-1,798

*[(130,801x1.049)-130,801] = 6,409 thousand

**[(107,405)x1.059 – 107,405] = 6,337 thousand

Source: http://data.bls.gov/pdq/SurveyOutputServlet

II Falling Real Wages. The wage bill is the product of average weekly hours times the earnings per hour. Table II-1 provides the estimates by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of earnings per hour seasonally adjusted, increasing from $22.77/hour in Dec 2010 to $23.24/hour in Dec 2011, or by 2.1 percent. There has been disappointment in valuation of stocks about the pace of wage increases because of rising food and energy costs that inhibit consumption and thus sales and similar concern about growth of consumption that accounts for 70 percent of GDP. Growth of consumption by decreasing savings by means of controlling interest rates in what is called financial repression may not be lasting and sound for personal finances (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/slow-growth-falling-real-disposable.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/11/us-growth-standstill-falling-real.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/10/slow-growth-driven-by-reducing-savings.html). Average hourly earnings fell by 0.1 percent from $23.20 in Nov 2011 to $23.24 in Dec 2011 or by 0.2 percent. Average private weekly earnings increased by $20.73 from $778.73 in Dec 2010 to $799.46 in Dec 2011 or by 2.7 percent and increased by 0.5 percent from Nov to Dec 2011. The inflation-adjusted wage bill can only be calculated for Nov, which is the most recent month for which there are estimates of the consumer price index. Earnings per hour rose from $22.76 in Nov 2010 to $23.20 in Nov 2011 or by 1.9 percent (http://www.bls.gov/data/; see Table II-3 below). Average weekly hours were 34.2 in Nov 2010 and 34.3 in Nov 2011 (http://www.bls.gov/data/; see Table II-2 below). The wage bill rose 1.9 percent in the 12 months ending in Oct 2011:

{[(wage bill in Oct 2011)/(wage bill in Oct 2010)]-1}100 =

{[($23.20x34.3)/($22.76x34.2)]-1]}100

= {[($795.76/$$778.39)]-1}100 = 2.2%

CPI inflation was 3.4 percent in the 12 months ending in Oct 2011 (http://www.bls.gov/cpi/) for an inflation-adjusted wage-bill decline of 1.2 percent :{[(1.022/1.034)-1]100}. Energy and food price increases are similar to a “silent tax” that is highly regressive, harming the most those with lowest incomes. There are concerns that the wage bill would deteriorate in purchasing power because of renewed raw materials shock in the form of increases in prices of commodities such as the 31.1 percent steady increase in the DJ-UBS Commodity Index from Jul 2, 2010 to Sep 2, 2011. The charts of four commodity price indexes by Bloomberg show steady increase since Jul 2, 2010 that was interrupted briefly only in Nov 2010 with the sovereign issues in Europe triggered by Ireland, in Mar by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and in the beginning of May by the decline in oil prices and sovereign risk difficulties in Europe (http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/commodities/futures/). Renewed risk aversion because of the sovereign risks in Europe has reduced the rate of increase of the DJ UBS commodity index to 14.9 percent on Jan 6, 2012, relative to Jul 2, 2010. Inflation has been rising in waves with carry trades driven by zero interest rates to commodity futures during periods of risk appetite with interruptions during risk aversion (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/11/world-inflation-waves-and-monetary_21.html).

Table II-1, US, Earnings per Hour and Average Weekly Hours SA

Earnings per Hour

Dec 2010

Oct 2011

Nov 2011

Dec 2011

Total Private

$22.77

$23.20

$23.20

$23.24

Goods Producing

$24.20

$24.58

$24.52

$24.64

Service Providing

$22.44

$22.88

$22.89

$22.91

Average Weekly Earnings

       

Total Private

$778.73

$798.08

$795.76

$799.46

Goods Producing

$960.74

$985.66

$980.80

$988.06

Service Providing

$742.76

$761.90

$759.95

$762.90

Average Weekly Hours

       

Total Private

34.2

34.4

34.3

34.4

Goods Producing

39.7

40.1

40.0

40.1

Service Providing

33.1

33.3

33.2

33.3

Source: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

Table II-2 provides average weekly hours of all employees in the US from 2006 to 2011. Average weekly hours fell from 34.7 in Jun 2007 to 33.7 in Jun 2009, which was the last month of the contraction. Average weekly hours rose to 34.4 in Dec 2011.

Table II-2, US, Average Weekly Hours of All Employees 2006-2011

Year

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

2006

   

34.4

34.5

34.5

34.6

34.5

34.5

34.5

34.6

34.5

34.7

2007

34.4

34.6

34.6

34.6

34.6

34.7

34.6

34.5

34.6

34.5

34.5

34.6

2008

34.5

34.6

34.6

34.5

34.5

34.6

34.5

34.5

34.4

34.4

34.3

34.1

2009

34.1

34.1

34.0

33.9

33.8

33.7

33.8

33.9

33.9

33.8

34.0

33.9

2010

34.0

34.0

34.1

34.1

34.2

34.1

34.2

34.2

34.2

34.3

34.2

34.2

2011

34.2

34.3

34.3

34.4

34.4

34.3

34.3

34.2

34.3

34.4

34.3

34.4

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart II-1 provides average weekly hours monthly from Mar 2006 to Dec 2011. Average weekly hours remained relatively stable in the period before the contraction and fell sharply during the contraction as business could not support lower production with the same labor input. Average weekly hours rose rapidly during the expansion but have stabilized at a level below that prevailing before the contraction.

clip_image072

Chart II-1, US, Average Weekly Hours of All Employees 2006-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Calculations with BLS data of inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings are shown in Table II-3. The final column of Table II-3 (“12 Month Real ∆%”) provides inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings of all employees in the US. Average hourly earnings rose above inflation throughout the first nine months of 2007 just before the global recession that began in the final quarter of 2007 when average hourly earnings lost to inflation. In contrast, average hourly earnings of all US workers have risen less than inflation in five months in 2010 and in all but one month in 2011 and the loss has accelerated to 1.5 percent in Nov 2011, which is the most recent month for which there are consumer price index data.

Table II-3, US, Average Hourly Earnings Nominal and Inflation Adjusted, Dollars and % NSA

 

AHE ALL

12 Month
Nominal
∆%

∆% 12 Month CPI

12 Month
Real ∆%

2007

       

Jan*

$20.70*

4.2*

2.1

2.1*

Feb*

$20.79*

4.1*

2.4

1.7*

Mar

$20.78

3.6

2.8

0.8

Apr

$20.85

3.5

2.6

0.7

May

$20.89

3.8

2.7

1.1

Jun

$21.00

3.8

2.7

1.1

Jul

$21.04

3.7

2.4

1.3

Aug

$21.03

3.5

1.9

1.6

Sep

$21.12

3.5

2.8

0.7

Oct

$21.11

3.1

3.5

-0.4

Nov

$21.17

3.3

4.3

-0.9

Dec

$21.27

3.4

4.1

-0.7

2010

       

Jan

$22.44

1.9

2.6

-0.7

Feb

$22.48

1.9

2.1

-0.2

Mar

$22.48

1.8

2.3

-0.5

Apr

$22.52

1.8

2.2

-0.4

May

$22.57

1.9

2.0

-0.1

Jun

$22.57

1.8

1.1

0.7

Jul

$22.61

1.8

1.2

0.6

Aug

$22.67

1.8

1.1

0.7

Sep

$22.70

1.7

1.1

0.6

Oct

$22.77

1.9

1.2

0.7

Nov

$22.76

1.7

1.1

0.6

Dec

$22.77

1.7

1.5

0.2

2011

       

Jan

$22.86

1.9

1.6

0.3

Feb

$22.88

1.8

2.1

-0.3

Mar

$22.89

1.8

2.7

-0.9

Apr

$22.93

1.8

3.2

-1.4

May

$23.02

2.0

3.6

-1.5

Jun

$23.01

1.9

3.6

-1.6

Jul

$23.12

2.3

3.6

-1.3

Aug

$23.08

1.8

3.8

-1.9

Sep

$23.13

1.9

3.9

-1.9

Oct

$23.20

1.9

3.5

-1.5

Nov

$23.20

1.9

3.4

-1.5

Dec

$23.24

2.1

   

Note: AHE ALL: average hourly earnings of all employees; CPI: consumer price index; Real: adjusted by CPI inflation; NA: not available

*AHE of production and nonsupervisory employees because of unavailability of data for all employees

Source: http://www.bls.gov/data/

ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/cpi/cpiai.txt

Average hourly earnings of all US employees in the US in constant dollars of 1982-1984 from the dataset of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) are provided in Table II-4. Average hourly earnings fell 1.4 percent after adjusting for inflation in the 12 months ending in Nov 2011. Table II-4 confirms the trend of deterioration of purchasing power of average hourly earnings in 2011. Those who still work bring back home a paycheck that buys fewer goods than a year earlier and savings in bank deposits do not pay anything because of financial repression.

Table II-4, US, Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees in Constant Dollars of 1982-1984

Year

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

2006

10.02

10.00

9.97

10.06

10.14

10.14

2007

10.14

10.13

10.13

10.13

10.09

10.04

2008

9.95

9.88

9.93

9.96

10.06

10.29

2009

10.34

10.34

10.33

10.33

10.32

10.31

2010

10.41

10.39

10.40

10.39

10.40

10.38

2011

10.26

10.26

10.20

10.19

10.23

10.23

∆% 20011
/2010

-1.4

-1.3

-1.9

-1.9

-1.6

-1.4

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

The deterioration of purchasing power of average hourly earnings of US workers is shown by Chart II-2 of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Chart II-2 plots average hourly earnings of all US employees in constant 1982-1984 dollars with evident decline from 2010 to 2011.

clip_image074

Chart II-2, US, Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees in Constant Dollars of 1982-1984

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart II-3 provides 12-month percentage changes of average hourly earnings of all employees in constant dollars of 1982-1984, that is, adjusted for inflation. There was sharp contraction of inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings of US employees during parts of 2007 and 2008. Rates of change in 12 months became positive in parts of 2009 and 2010 but then became negative again in 2011.

clip_image006[1]

Chart II-3, Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees 12-Month Percent Change, 1982-1984 Dollars, 2007-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Average weekly earnings of all US employees in the US in constant dollars of 1982-1984 from the dataset of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) are provided in Table II-5. Average weekly earnings fell 1.9 percent after adjusting for inflation in the 12 months ending in Aug 2011, 1.6 percent in the 12 months ending in Sep, 1.3 percent in the 12 months ending in Oct and 1.1 percent in the 12 months ending in Nov 2011. Table II-5 confirms the trend of deterioration of purchasing power of average weekly earnings in 2011. Those who still work bring back home a paycheck that buys fewer goods than a year earlier.

Table II-5, US, Average Weekly Earnings of All Employees in Constant Dollars of 1982-1984

Year

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

2006

344.83

343.82

347.21

350.80

349.96

2007

350.57

349.34

350.54

348.21

346.46

2008

341.01

342.67

342.66

346.01

352.98

2009

349.52

350.14

350.21

348.86

350.57

2010

355.32

355.54

355.42

356.67

355.04

2011

351.79

348.85

349.57

351.94

350.99

∆% 20011
/2010

-1.0

-1.9

-1.6

-1.3

-1.1

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart II-4 provides average weekly earnings of all employees in constant dollars of 1982-1984. The same pattern emerges of sharp decline during the contraction, followed by recovery in the expansion and continuing fall from 2010 to 2011.

clip_image074[1]

Chart II-4, US, Average Weekly Earnings of All Employees in Constant Dollars of 1982-1984

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

Chart II-5 provides 12-month percentage changes of average weekly earnings of all employees in the US in constant dollars of 1982-1984. There is the same pattern of contraction during the global recession in 2008 and then again trend of deterioration in the recovery without hiring and inflation waves in 2011 (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html).

clip_image076

Chart II-5, US, Average Weekly Earnings of All Employees in Constant Dollars of 1982-1984 12-Month Percent Change 2007-2011

Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

http://www.bls.gov/data/

III World Financial Turbulence. Financial markets are being shocked by multiple factors including (1) world economic slowdown; (2) growth in China, Japan and world trade; (3) slow growth propelled by savings reduction in the US with high unemployment/underemployment; and (3) the outcome of the sovereign debt crisis in Europe. This section analyzes the events of the week before the meeting of leaders of France and Germany on Jan 9. Subsection IIIA Financial Risks provides analysis of the evolution of valuations of risk assets during the week. There are various appendixes at the end of this section for convenience of reference of material related to the euro area debt crisis. Subsection IIIB Appendix on Safe Haven Currencies discusses arguments and measures of currency intervention. Subsection IIIC Appendix on Fiscal Compact provides analysis of the restructuring of the fiscal affairs of the European Union in the agreement of European leaders on Dec 9, 2011. Subsection IIID Appendix on European Central Bank Large Scale Lender of Last Resort considers the policies of the European Central Bank. Appendix IIID Euro Zone Survival Risk analyzes the threats to survival of the European Monetary Union. Subsection IIIF Appendix on Sovereign Bond Valuation provides more technical analysis.

IIIA Financial Risks. The past four months have been characterized by financial turbulence, attaining unusual magnitude in the past few weeks. Table III-1, updated with every comment in this blog, provides beginning values on Fr Dec 30 and daily values throughout the week ending on Fri Jan 6 of several financial assets. Section VI Valuation of Risk Financial Assets provides a set of more complete values. All data are for New York time at 5 PM. The first column provides the value on Fri Dec 30 and the percentage change in that prior week below the label of the financial risk asset. The first five asset rows provide five key exchange rates versus the dollar and the percentage cumulative appreciation (positive change or no sign) or depreciation (negative change or negative sign). Positive changes constitute appreciation of the relevant exchange rate and negative changes depreciation. Financial turbulence has been dominated by reactions to the new program for Greece (see section IB in http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/07/debt-and-financial-risk-aversion-and.html), modifications and new approach adopted in the Euro Summit of Oct 26 (European Commission 2011Oct26SS, 2011Oct26MRES), doubts on the larger countries in the euro zone with sovereign risks such as Spain and Italy but expanding into possibly France and Germany, the growth standstill recession and long-term unsustainable government debt in the US, worldwide deceleration of economic growth and continuing inflation. The most important current shock is that resulting from the agreement by European leaders at their meeting on Dec 9 (European Council 2911Dec9), which is analyzed in IIIC Appendix on Fiscal Compact.

The dollar/euro rate is quoted as number of US dollars USD per one euro EUR, USD 1.2944/EUR in the first row, first column in the block for currencies in Table III-1 for Fri Dec 30, appreciating to USD 1.2934/EUR on Mon Jan 2, or by 0.1 percent. The dollar appreciated because fewer dollars, $1.2934, were required on Jan 3 to buy one euro than $1.2944 on Dec 30. Table III-1 defines a country’s exchange rate as number of units of domestic currency per unit of foreign currency. USD/EUR would be the definition of the exchange rate of the US and the inverse [1/(USD/EUR)] is the definition in this convention of the rate of exchange of the euro zone, EUR/USD. A convention used throughout this blog is required to maintain consistency in characterizing movements of the exchange rate in Table III-1 as appreciation and depreciation. The first row for each of the currencies shows the exchange rate at 5 PM New York time, such as USD 1.2934/EUR on Jan 2; the second row provides the cumulative percentage appreciation or depreciation of the exchange rate from the rate on the last business day of the prior week, in this case Fri Dec 30, to the last business day of the current week, in this case Fri Jan 6, such as appreciation by 1.7 percent to USD 1.2720/EUR by Jan 6; and the third row provides the percentage change from the prior business day to the current business day. For example, the USD appreciated (positive sign) by 1.7 percent from the rate of USD 1.2944/EUR on Fri Dec 30 to the rate of USD 1.2720/EUR on Fri Jan 6 {[(1.2720/1.2944) – 1]100 = -1.7%} and appreciated by 0.6 percent from the rate of USD 1.2795 on Thu Jan 5 to USD 1.2720/EUR on Fri Jan 6 {[(1.2720/1.2795) -1]100 = -0.6%}. Other factors constant, appreciation of the dollar relative to the euro is caused by increasing risk aversion, with rising uncertainty on European sovereign risks increasing dollar-denominated assets with sales of risk financial investments. Funds move away from higher yield risk financial assets to the safety of dollar investments. When risk aversion declines, funds have been moving away from safe assets in dollars to risk financial assets.

III-I, Weekly Financial Risk Assets Jan 2 to Jan 6, 2012

Fri Dec 30, 2011

M 2

Tue 3

W 4

Thu 5

F 6

USD/EUR

1.2944

0.8%

1.2934

0.1%

0.1%

1.3052

-0.9%

-0.9%

1.2942

0.0%

0.8%

1.2795

1.1%

1.1%

1.2720

1.7%

0.6%

JPY/USD

76.887

1.5%

76.8918

0.0%

0.0%

76.6852

0.3%

0.3%

78.7043

-2.3%

-2.6%

77.225

-0.4%

1.9%

76.96

-0.1%

0.3%

CHF/  USD

0.935

0.2%

0.9397

-0.5%

-0.5%

0.9322

0.3%

0.8%

0.9416

-0.7%

-1.0%

0.9522

-1.8%

-1.1%

0.956

-2.2%

-0.4%

CHF/ EUR

1.2152

0.5%

1.2154

0.0%

0.0%

1.2166

-0.1%

-0.1%

1.2186

-0.3%

-0.2%

1.2184

-0.3%

0.0%

1.2150

0.0%

0.3%

USD/  AUD

1.02

0.9804

0.5%

1.0244

0.9762

0.4%

0.4%

1.0373

0.9640

1.7%

1.2%

1.0364

0.9649

1.6%

-0.1%

1.0267

0.9739

0.7%

-0.9%

1.022

0.9785

0.2%

-0.5%

10 Year  T Note

1.871

1.88

1.95

1.99

2.01

1.957

2 Year     T Note

0.239

0.24

0.26

0.26

0.26

0.256

German Bond

2Y 0.14 10Y 1.83

2Y 0.20 10Y 1.91

2Y 0.19 10Y 1.90

2Y 0.18 10Y 1.92

2Y 0.17 10Y 1.86

2Y 0.17 10Y 1.85

DJIA

12217.56

-0.6%

12217.56

-0.6%

-0.6%

12397.38

1.5%

1.5%

12418.42

1.6%

0.2%

12415.47

1.6%

0.0%

12359.92

1.2%

-0.4%

DJ Global

1801.60

-0.1%

1811.45

0.5%

0.5%

1849.30

2.6%

2.1%

1839.47

2.1%

-0.5%

1824.21

1.3%

-0.8%

1812.76

0.6%

-0.6%

DJ Asia Pacific

1161.94

0.3%

1160.86

-0.1%

-0.1%

1176.39

1.2%

1.3%

1187.81

2.2%

1.0%

1178.25

1.4%

-0.8%

1168.32

0.5%

-0.8%

Nikkei

8455.35

0.7%

8455.35

0.7%

0.7%

8455.35

0.0%

0.0%

8560.11

1.2%

1.2%

8488.71

0.4%

-0.8%

8390.35

-0.8%

-1.2%

Shanghai

2199.42

-0.2%

2199.42

1.2%

1.2%

2199.42

1.2%

1.2%

2169.39

-1.4%

-1.4%

2148.45

-2.3%

-1.0%

2163.39

-1.6%

0.7%

DAX

5898.35

0.3%

6075.52

3.0%

3.0%

6166.57

4.5%

1.5%

6111.55

3.6%

-0.9%

6095.99

3.3%

-0.3%

6057.92

2.7%

-0.6%

DJ UBS

Comm.

140.68

-0.4%

140.68

--

--

144.16

2.5%

2.5%

144.49

2.7%

0.2%

142.34

1.2%

-1.5%

142.55

1.3%

0.1%

WTI $ B

98.97

-0.8%

98.83

-0.1%

-0.1%

103.06

4.1%

4.3%

103.48

4.5%

0.4%

101.78

2.8%

-1.6%

101.76

2.8%

0.0%

Brent    $/B

107.54

-0.4%

107.38

-0.1%

-0.1%

112.40

4.5%

4.7%

113.85

5.9%

1.3%

112.65

4.8%

-1.1%

113.40

5.5%

0.7%

Gold  $/OZ

1564.7

-2.6%

1566.8

0.1%

0.1%

1600.7

2.3%

2.2%

1612.8

3.1%

0.8%

1625.2

3.9%

0.8%

1617.5

3.4%

-0.5%

Note: USD: US dollar; JPY: Japanese Yen; CHF: Swiss

Franc; AUD: Australian dollar; Comm.: commodities; OZ: ounce

Sources: http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/

http://professional.wsj.com/mdc/page/marketsdata.html?mod=WSJ_hps_marketdata

The flow of cash from safe havens to risk financial assets is processed by carry trades from zero interest rates that are frustrated by episodes of risk aversion or encouraged with return of risk appetite. European sovereign risk crises are closely linked to the exposures of regional banks to government debt. An important form of financial repression consists of changing the proportions of debt held by financial institutions toward higher shares in government debt. The financial history of Latin America, for example, is rich in such policies. Bailouts in the euro zone have sanctioned “bailing in” the private sector, which means that creditors such as banks will participate by “voluntary” reduction of the principal in government debt (see Pelaez and Pelaez, International Financial Architecture (2005), 163-202). David Enrich, Sara Schaeffer Muñoz and Patricia Knowsmann, writing on “European nations pressure own banks for loans,” on Nov 29, 2011, published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204753404577066431341281676.html?mod=WSJPRO_hpp_MIDDLETopStories), provide important data and analysis on the role of banks in the European sovereign risk crisis. They assemble data from various sources showing that domestic banks hold 16.2 percent of Italy’s total government securities outstanding of €1,617.4 billion, 22.9 percent of Portugal’s total government securities of €103.9 billion and 12.3 percent of Spain’s total government securities of €535.3 billion. Capital requirements force banks to hold government securities to reduce overall risk exposure in balance sheets. Enrich, Schaeffer Muñoz and Knowsmann find information that governments are setting pressures on banks to acquire more government debt or at least to stop selling their holdings of government debt.

Bond auctions are also critical in episodes of risk aversion. David Oakley, writing on Jan 3, 2012, on “Sovereign issues draw euro to crunch point,” published by the Financial Times (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/63b9d7ca-2bfa-11e1-98bc-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1iLNRyEbs), estimates total euro area sovereign issues in 2012 at €794 billion, much higher than the long-term average of €670 billion. Oakley finds that the sovereign issues are: Italy €220 billion, France €197 billion, Germany €178 billion and Spain €81 billion. Bond auctions will test the resilience of the euro.

Table III-1 shows mixed results in valuations of risk financial assets in the week of Jan 6. Risk aversion returned in earlier weeks because of the uncertainties on rapidly moving political development in Greece, Italy, Spain and perhaps even in France and Germany. Most currency movements in Table III-1 reflect muted risk aversion because of continuing doubts on the success of the new agreement on Europe reached in the week of Dec 9. Risk aversion is probably best observed in foreign exchange markets with daily trading of $4 trillion instead of in relatively thin equity markets during year-end holidays. The dollar has fluctuated in a tight range with appreciation by 1.7 percent relative to the euro in the week of Jan 6.

Risk aversion is captured by flight of investors from risk financial assets to the government securities of the US and Germany. Increasing risk aversion is captured by decrease of the yield of the 10-year Treasury note from 2.326 percent on Oct 28 to 1.964 percent on Fri Nov 25, 2.065 on Dec 9 and collapse to 1.847 percent by Fr Dec 16. The yield of the 10-year Treasury rose from 1.81 percent on Mon Dec 19 to 2.027 percent on Fri Dec 23, falling to 1.871 percent on Fri Dec 30 and increasing to 1.957 percent on Jan 6, as shown in Table III-1. The 10-year Treasury yield is still at a level well below consumer price inflation of 3.4 percent in the 12 months ending in Nov (http://www.bls.gov/cpi/). Treasury securities continue to be safe haven for investors fearing risk but with concentration in shorter maturities such as the two-year Treasury with stable low yield of 0.226 percent on Dec 16 but rising to 0.28 percent on Dec 23 and then falling to 0.239 percent on Fri Dec 30 and 0.256 on Fri Jan 6, as shown in Table III-1. Investors are willing to sacrifice yield relative to inflation in defensive actions to avoid turbulence in valuations of risk financial assets but may be managing duration more carefully. During the financial panic of Sep 2008, funds moved away from risk exposures to government securities.

A similar risk aversion phenomenon occurred in Germany. The estimate of euro zone CPI inflation is at 2.8 percent for the 12 months ending in Dec (http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/2-04012012-AP/EN/2-04012012-AP-EN.PDF) but the yield of the two-year German government bond fell from 0.32 percent on Dec 9 to 0.22 percent on Dec 16, virtually equal to the yield of the two-year Treasury note of the US and settled at 0.23 percent on Fri Dec 23, collapsing to 0.14 percent on Fri Dec 30 and rising to 0.17 percent on Jan 6, as shown in Table III-1. The yield of the 10-year German government bond has also collapsed from 2.15 percent on Dec 9 to 1.85 percent on Dec 16, rising to 1.96 percent on Dec 23, falling to 1.83 percent on Dec 30, which was virtually equal to the yield of 1.871 percent of the US 10-year Treasury note. The ten-year government bond of Germany traded at 1.85 percent on Jan 6, as shown in Table III-1. Safety overrides inflation-adjusted yield but there could be duration aversion. Turbulence has also affected the market for German sovereign bonds.

There was mixed performance of equity indexes in Table III-1 during the week of Jan 6. Germany’s Dax rose 2.7 percent. DJIA gained 1.2 percent in the week of Fri Jan 6. Dow Global increased 1.4 percent in the week of Jan 6. China’s Shanghai Composite fell 1.6 percent in the week and Japan’s Nikkei Average dropped 0.8 percent.

Financial risk assets increase during moderation of risk aversion in carry trades from zero interest rates and fall during increasing risk aversion. Commodities increased in the week of Jan 6. The DJ UBS Commodities Index gained 1.3 percent. WTI increased 2.8 percent and Brent gained 5.5 percent and gold increased 3.4 percent. Confrontation with Iran may be influencing oil and commodity prices.

IIIB Appendix on Safe Haven Currencies. Safe-haven currencies, such as the Swiss franc (CHF) and the Japanese yen (JPY) have been under threat of appreciation but also remained relatively unchanged. A characteristic of the global recession would be struggle for maintaining competitiveness by policies of regulation, trade and devaluation (Pelaez and Pelaez, Government Intervention in Globalization: Regulation, Trade and Devaluation War (2008c)). Appreciation of the exchange rate causes two major effects on Japan.

1. Trade. Consider an example with actual data (Pelaez and Pelaez, Government Intervention in Globalization: Regulation, Trade and Devaluation Wars (2008c), 70-72). The yen traded at JPY 117.69/USD on Apr 2, 2007 and at JPY 102.77/USD on Apr 2, 2008, or appreciation of 12.7 percent. This meant that an export of JPY 10,000 to the US sold at USD 84.97 on Apr 2, 2007 [(JPY 10,000)/(USD 117.69/USD)], rising to USD 97.30 on Apr 2, 2008 [(JPY 10,000)/(JPY 102.77)]. If the goods sold by Japan were invoiced worldwide in dollars, Japanese’s companies would suffer a reduction in profit margins of 12.7 percent required to maintain the same dollar price. An export at cost of JPY 10,000 would only bring JPY 8,732 when converted at JPY 102.77 to maintain the price of USD 84.97 (USD 84.97 x JPY 102.77/USD). If profit margins were already tight, Japan would be uncompetitive and lose revenue and market share. The pain of Japan from dollar devaluation is illustrated by Table 58 in the Nov 6 comment of this blog (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/10/slow-growth-driven-by-reducing-savings.html): The yen traded at JPY 110.19/USD on Aug 18, 2008 and at JPY 75.812/USD on Oct 28, 2011, for cumulative appreciation of 31.2 percent. Cumulative appreciation from Sep 15, 2010 (JPY 83.07/USD) to Oct 28, 2011 (JPY 75.812) was 8.7 percent. The pain of Japan from dollar devaluation continues as illustrated by Table VI-6 in Section VI Valuation of Risk Financial Assets: The yen traded at JPY 110.19/USD on Aug 18, 2008 and at JPY 78.08/USD on Dec 23, 2011, for cumulative appreciation of 29.1 percent. Cumulative appreciation from Sep 15, 2010 (JPY 83.07/USD) to Dec 23, 2011 (JPY 78.08) was 6.0 percent.

2. Foreign Earnings and Investment. Consider the case of a Japanese company receiving earnings from investment overseas. Accounting the earnings and investment in the books in Japan would also result in a loss of 12.7 percent. Accounting would show fewer yen for investment and earnings overseas.

There is a point of explosion of patience with dollar devaluation and domestic currency appreciation. Andrew Monahan, writing on “Japan intervenes on yen to cap sharp rise,” on Oct 31, 2011, published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204528204577009152325076454.html?mod=WSJPRO_hpp_MIDDLETopStories), analyzes the intervention of the Bank of Japan, at request of the Ministry of Finance, on Oct 31, 2011. Traders consulted by Monahan estimate that the Bank of Japan sold JPY 7 trillion, about $92.31 billion, against the dollar, exceeding the JPY 4.5 trillion on Aug 4, 2011. The intervention caused an increase of the yen rate to JPY 79.55/USD relative to earlier trading at a low of JPY 75.31/USD. The JPY appreciated to JPY76.88/USD by Fri Nov 18 for cumulative appreciation of 3.4 percent from JPY 79.55 just after the intervention. The JPY appreciated another 0.3 percent in the week of Nov 18 but depreciated 1.1 percent in the week of Nov 25. There was mild depreciation of 0.3 percent in the week of Dec 2 that was followed by appreciation of 0.4 percent in the week of Dec 9. The JPY was virtually unchanged in the week of Dec 16 with depreciation of 0.1 percent but depreciated by 0.5 percent in the week of Dec 23, appreciating by 1.5 percent in the week of Dec 30. Historically, interventions in yen currency markets have been unsuccessful (Pelaez and Pelaez, The Global Recession Risk (2007), 107-109). Interventions are even more difficult currently with daily trading of some $4 trillion in world currency markets. Risk aversion with zero interest rates in the US diverts hot capital movements toward safe-haven currencies such as Japan, causing appreciation of the yen. Mitsuru Obe, writing on Nov 25, on “Japanese government bonds tumble,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204452104577060231493070676.html?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTWhatsNewsCollection), analyzes the increase in yields of the Japanese government bond with 10 year maturity to a high for one month of 1.025 percent at the close of market on Nov 25. Thin markets in after-hours trading may have played an important role in this increase in yield but there may have been an effect of a dreaded reduction in positions of bonds by banks under pressure of reducing assets. The report on Japan sustainability by the IMF (2011JSRNov23, 2), analyzes how rising yields could threaten Japan:

· “As evident from recent developments, market sentiment toward sovereigns with unsustainably large fiscal imbalances can shift abruptly, with adverse effects on debt dynamics. Should JGB yields increase, they could initiate an adverse feedback loop from rising yields to deteriorating confidence, diminishing policy space, and a contracting real economy.

· Higher yields could result in a withdrawal of liquidity from global capital markets, disrupt external positions and, through contagion, put upward pressure on sovereign bond yields elsewhere.”

Exchange rate controls by the Swiss National Bank (SNB) fixing the rate at a minimum of CHF 1.20/EUR (http://www.snb.ch/en/mmr/reference/pre_20110906/source/pre_20110906.en.pdf) has prevented flight of capital into the Swiss franc. The Swiss franc remained unchanged relative to the USD in the week of Dec 23 and appreciated 0.2 percent in the week of Dec 30 relative to the USD and 0.5 percent relative to the euro, as shown in Table II-1. Risk aversion is evident in the depreciation of the Australian dollar by cumulative 2.5 percent in the week of Fr Dec 16 after no change in the week of Dec 9. In the week of Dec 23, the Australian dollar appreciated 1.9 percent, appreciating another 0.5 percent in the week of Dec 30 as shown in Table II-1. Risk appetite would be revealed by carry trades from zero interest rates in the US and Japan into high yielding currencies such as in Australia with appreciation of the Australian dollar (see Pelaez and Pelaez, Globalization and the State, Vol. II (2008b), 202-4, Pelaez and Pelaez, Government Intervention in Globalization (2008c), 70-4).

IIIC Appendix on Fiscal Compact. There are three types of actions in Europe to steer the euro zone away from the threats of fiscal and banking crises: (1) fiscal compact; (2) enhancement of stabilization tools and resources; and (3) bank capital requirements. The first two consist of agreements by the Euro Area Heads of State and government while the third one consists of measurements and recommendations by the European Banking Authority.

1. Fiscal Compact. The “fiscal compact” consists of (1) conciliation of fiscal policies and budgets within a “fiscal rule”; and (2) establishment of mechanisms of governance, monitoring and enforcement of the fiscal rule.

i. Fiscal Rule. The essence of the fiscal rule is that “general government budgets shall be balanced or in surplus” by compliance of members countries that “the annual structural deficit does not exceed 0.5% of nominal GDP” (European Council 2011Dec9, 3). Individual member states will create “an automatic correction mechanism that shall be triggered in the event of deviation” (European Council 2011Dec9, 3). Member states will define their automatic correction mechanisms following principles proposed by the European Commission. Those member states falling into an “excessive deficit procedure” will provide a detailed plan of structural reforms to correct excessive deficits. The European Council and European Commission will monitor yearly budget plans for consistency with adjustment of excessive deficits. Member states will report in anticipation their debt issuance plans. Deficits in excess of 3 percent of GDP and/or debt in excess of 60 percent of GDP will trigger automatic consequences.

ii. Policy Coordination and Governance. The euro area is committed to following common economic policy. In accordance, “a procedure will be established to ensure that all major economic policy reforms planned by euro area member states will be discussed and coordinated at the level of the euro area, with a view to benchmarking best practices” (European Council 2011Dec9, 5). Governance of the euro area will be strengthened with regular euro summits at least twice yearly.

2. Stabilization Tools and Resources. There are several enhancements to the bailouts of member states.

i. Facilities. The European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) will use leverage and the European Central Bank as agent of its market operations. The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) or permanent bailout facility will be operational as soon as 90 percent of the capital commitments are ratified by member states. The ESM is planned to begin in Jul 2012.

ii. Financial Resources. The overall ceiling of the EFSF/ESM of €500 billion (USD 670 billion) will be reassessed in Mar 2012. Measures will be taken to maintain “the combined effective lending capacity of EUR 500 billion” (European Council 2011Dec9, 6). Member states will “consider, and confirm within 10 days, the provision of additional resources for the IMF of up to EUR 200 billion (USD 270 billion), in the form of bilateral loans, to ensure that the IMF has adequate resources to deal with the crisis. We are looking forward to parallel contributions from the international community” (European Council 2011Dec9, 6). Matthew Dalton and Matina Stevis, writing on Dec 20, 2011, on “Euro Zone Agrees to New IMF Loans,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204791104577107974167166272.html?mod=WSJPRO_hps_MIDDLESecondNews), inform that at a meeting on Dec 20, finance ministers of the euro-zone developed plans to contribute €150 billion in bilateral loans to the IMF as provided in the agreement of Dec 9. Bailouts “will strictly adhere to the well established IMF principles and practices.” There is a specific statement on private sector involvement and its relation to recent experience: “We clearly reaffirm that the decisions taken on 21 July and 26/27 October concerning Greek debt are unique and exceptional; standardized and identical Collective Action clauses will be included, in such a way as to preserve market liquidity, in the terms and conditions of all new euro government bonds” (European Council 2011Dec9, 6). Will there be again “unique and exceptional” conditions? The ESM is authorized to take emergency decisions with “a qualified majority of 85% in case the Commission and the ECB conclude that an urgent decision related to financial assistance is needed when the financial and economic sustainability of the euro area is threatened” (European Council 2011Dec9, 6).

3. Bank Capital. The European Banking Authority (EBA) finds that European banks have a capital shortfall of €114.7 billion (http://stress-test.eba.europa.eu/capitalexercise/Press%20release%20FINAL.pdf). To avoid credit difficulties, the EBA recommends “that the credit institutions build a temporary capital buffer to reach a 9% Core Tier 1 ratio by 30 June 2012” (http://stress-test.eba.europa.eu/capitalexercise/EBA%20BS%202011%20173%20Recommendation%20FINAL.pdf 6). Patrick Jenkins, Martin Stabe and Stanley Pignal, writing on Dec 9, 2011, on “EU banks slash sovereign holdings,” published in the Financial Times (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/a6d2fd4e-228f-11e1-acdc-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1gAlaswcW), analyze the balance sheets of European banks released by the European Banking Authority. They conclude that European banks have reduced their holdings of riskier sovereign debt of countries in Europe by €65 billion from the end of 2010 to Sep 2011. Bankers informed that the European Central Bank and hedge funds acquired those exposures that represent 13 percent of their holdings of debt to Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain, which are down to €513 billion by the end of IIIQ2011.

IIID Appendix on European Central Bank Large Scale Lender of Last Resort. · European Central Bank. The European Central Bank (ECB) has been pressured to assist in the bailouts by acquiring sovereign debts. The ECB has been providing liquidity lines to banks under pressure and has acquired sovereign debts but not in the scale desired by authorities. In an important statement to the European Parliament, the President of the ECB Mario Draghi (2011Dec1) opened the possibility of further ECB actions but after a decisive “fiscal compact:”

“What I believe our economic and monetary union needs is a new fiscal compact – a fundamental restatement of the fiscal rules together with the mutual fiscal commitments that euro area governments have made.

Just as we effectively have a compact that describes the essence of monetary policy – an independent central bank with a single objective of maintaining price stability – so a fiscal compact would enshrine the essence of fiscal rules and the government commitments taken so far, and ensure that the latter become fully credible, individually and collectively.

We might be asked whether a new fiscal compact would be enough to stabilise markets and how a credible longer-term vision can be helpful in the short term. Our answer is that it is definitely the most important element to start restoring credibility.

Other elements might follow, but the sequencing matters. And it is first and foremost important to get a commonly shared fiscal compact right. Confidence works backwards: if there is an anchor in the long term, it is easier to maintain trust in the short term. After all, investors are themselves often taking decisions with a long time horizon, especially with regard to government bonds.

A new fiscal compact would be the most important signal from euro area governments for embarking on a path of comprehensive deepening of economic integration. It would also present a clear trajectory for the future evolution of the euro area, thus framing expectations.”

An important statement of Draghi (2011Dec15) focuses on the role of central banking: “You all know that the statutes of the ECB inherited this important principle and that central bank independence and the credible pursuit of price stability go hand in hand.”

Draghi (2011Dec19) explains measures to ensure “access to funding markets” by euro zone banks:

§ “We have decided on three-year refinancing operations to support the supply of credit to the euro area economy. These measures address the risk that persistent financial markets tensions could affect the capacity of euro area banks to obtain refinancing over longer horizons.

§ Earlier, in October, the Governing Council had already decided to have two more refinancing operations with a maturity of around one year.

§ Also, it was announced then that in all refinancing operations until at least the first half of 2012 all liquidity demand by banks would be fully allotted at fixed rate.

§ Funding via the covered bonds market was also facilitated by the ECB deciding in October to introduce a new Covered Bond Purchase Programme of €40 billion.

§ Funding in US dollar is facilitated by lowering the pricing on the temporary US dollar liquidity swap arrangements.”

Lionel Barber and Ralph Atkins interviewed Mario Draghi on Dec 14 with the transcript published in the Financial Times on Dec 18 (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/25d553ec-2972-11e1-a066-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1gzoHXOj6) as “FT interview transcript: Mario Draghi.” A critical question in the interview is if the new measures are a European version of quantitative easing. Draghi analyzes the difference between the measures of the European Central Bank (ECB) and quantitative easing such as in Japan, US and UK:

1. The measures are termed “non-standard” instead of “unconventional.” While quantitative easing attempts to lower the yield of targeted maturities, the three-year facility operates through the “bank channel.” Quantitative easing would not be feasible because the ECB is statutorily prohibited of funding central governments. The ECB would comply with its mandate of medium-term price stability.

2. There is a critical difference in the two programs. Quantitative easing has been used as a form of financial repression known as “directed lending.” For example, the purchase of mortgage-backed securities more recently or the suspension of the auctions of 30-year bonds in response to the contraction early in the 2000s has the clear objective of directing spending to housing. The ECB gives the banks entire discretion on how to use the funding within their risk/return decisions, which could include purchase of government bonds.

The question on the similarity of the ECB three-year lending facility and quantitative easing is quite valid. Tracy Alloway, writing on Oct 10, 2011, on “Investors worry over cheap ECB money side effects,” published in the Financial Times (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/d2f87d16-f339-11e0-8383-00144feab49a.html#axzz1hAqMH1vn), analyzes the use of earlier long-term refinancing operations (LTRO) of the ECB. LTROs by the ECB in Jun, Sep and Dec 2009 lent €614 billion at 1 percent. Alloway quotes estimates of Deutsche Bank that banks used €442billion to acquire assets with higher yields. Carry trades developed from LTRO funds at 1 percent into liquid investments at a higher yield to earn highly profitable spreads. Alloway quotes estimates of Morgan Stanley that European debt of GIIPS (Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain) in European bank balance sheets is €700 billion. Tracy Alloway, writing on Dec 21, 2011, on “Demand for ECB loans rises to €489bn,” published in the Financial Times (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/d6ddd0ae-2bbd-11e1-98bc-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1hAqMH1vn), informs that European banks borrowed the largest value of €489 billion in all LTROs of the ECB. Tom Fairless and David Cottle, writing on Dec 21, 2011, on “ECB sees record refinancing demand,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204464404577111983838592746.html?mod=WSJPRO_hpp_LEFTTopStories), inform that the first of three operations of the ECB lent €489.19 billion, or $639.96 billion, to 523 banks. Three such LTROs could add to $1.9 trillion, which is not far from the value of quantitative easing in the US of $2.5 trillion. Fairless and Cottle find that there could be renewed hopes that banks could use the LTROs to support euro zone bond markets. It is possible that there could be official moral suasion by governments on banks to increase their holdings of government bonds or at least not to sell existing holdings. Banks are not free to choose assets in evaluation of risk and returns. Floods of cheap money at 1 percent per year induce carry trades to high-risk assets and not necessarily financing of growth with borrowing and lending decisions constrained by shocks of confidence.

The LTROs of the ECB are not very different from the liquidity facilities of the Fed during the financial crisis. Kohn (2009Sep10) finds that the trillions of dollars in facilities provided by the Fed (see Pelaez and Pelaez, Financial Regulation after the Global Recession (2009a), 157-64, Regulation of Banks and Finance (2009b), 224-7) could fall under normal principles of “lender of last resort” of central banks:

“The liquidity measures we took during the financial crisis, although unprecedented in their details, were generally consistent with Bagehot's principles and aimed at short-circuiting these feedback loops. The Federal Reserve lends only against collateral that meets specific quality requirements, and it applies haircuts where appropriate. Beyond the collateral, in many cases we also have recourse to the borrowing institution for repayment. In the case of the TALF, we are backstopped by the Treasury. In addition, the terms and conditions of most of our facilities are designed to be unattractive under normal market conditions, thus preserving borrowers' incentives to obtain funds in the market when markets are operating normally. Apart from a very small number of exceptions involving systemically important institutions, such features have limited the extent to which the Federal Reserve has taken on credit risk, and the overall credit risk involved in our lending during the crisis has been small.

In Ricardo's view, if the collateral had really been good, private institutions would have lent against it. However, as has been recognized since Bagehot, private lenders, acting to protect themselves, typically severely curtail lending during a financial crisis, irrespective of the quality of the available collateral. The central bank--because it is not liquidity constrained and has the infrastructure in place to make loans against a variety of collateral--is well positioned to make those loans in the interest of financial stability, and can make them without taking on significant credit risk, as long as its lending is secured by sound collateral. A key function of the central bank is to lend in such circumstances to contain the crisis and mitigate its effects on the economy.”

The Bagehot (1873) principle is that central banks should provide a safety net, lending to temporarily illiquid but solvent banks and not to insolvent banks (see Cline 2001, 2002; Pelaez and Pelaez, International Financial Architecture (2005), 175-8). Kohn (2009Apr18) characterizes “quantitative easing” as “large scale purchases of assets:”

“Another aspect of our efforts to affect financial conditions has been the extension of our open market operations to large-scale purchases of agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), agency debt, and longer-term Treasury debt. We initially announced our intention to undertake large-scale asset purchases last November, when the federal funds rate began to approach its zero lower bound and we needed to begin applying stimulus through other channels as the economic contraction deepened. These purchases are intended to reduce intermediate- and longer-term interest rates on mortgages and other credit to households and businesses; those rates influence decisions about investments in long-lived assets like houses, consumer durable goods, and business capital. In ordinary circumstances, the typically quite modest volume of central bank purchases and sales of such assets has only small and temporary effects on their yields. However, the extremely large volume of purchases now underway does appear to have substantially lowered yields. The decline in yields reflects "preferred habitat" behavior, meaning that there is not perfect arbitrage between the yields on longer-term assets and current and expected short-term interest rates. These preferences are likely to be especially strong in current circumstances, so that long-term asset prices rise and yields fall as the Federal Reserve acquires a significant portion of the outstanding stock of securities held by the public.”

Non-standard ECB policy and unconventional Fed policy have a common link in the scale of implementation or policy doses. Direct lending by the central bank to banks is the function “large scale lender of last resort.” If there is moral suasion by governments to coerce banks into increasing their holdings of government bonds, the correct term would be financial repression.

An important additional measure discussed by Draghi (2011Nov19) is relaxation on the collateral pledged by banks in LTROs:

“Some banks’ access to refinancing operations may be restricted by lack of eligible collateral. To overcome this, a temporary expansion of the list of collateral has been decided. Furthermore, the ECB intends to enhance the use of bank loans as collateral in Eurosystem operations. These measures should support bank lending, by increasing the amount of assets on euro area banks’ balance sheets that can be used to obtain central bank refinancing.”

There are collateral concerns about European banks. David Enrich and Sara Schaefer Muñoz, writing on Dec 28, on “European bank worry: collateral,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203899504577126430202451796.html?mod=WSJPRO_hpp_LEFTTopStories), analyze the strain on bank funding from a squeeze in the availability of high-quality collateral as guarantee in funding. High-quality collateral includes government bonds and investment-grade non-government debt. There could be difficulties in funding for a bank without sufficient available high-quality collateral to offer in guarantee of loans. It is difficult to assess from bank balance sheets the availability of sufficient collateral to support bank funding requirements. There has been erosion in the quality of collateral as a result of the debt crisis and further erosion could occur. Perceptions of counterparty risk among financial institutions worsened the credit/dollar crisis of 2007 to 2009. The banking theory of Diamond and Rajan (2000, 2001a, 2001b) and the model of Diamond Dybvig (1983, 1986) provide the analysis of bank functions that explains the credit crisis of 2007 to 2008 (see Pelaez and Pelaez, Financial Regulation after the Global Recession (2009a), 155-7, 48-52, Regulation of Banks and Finance (2009b), 52-66, 217-24). In fact, Rajan (2005, 339-41) anticipated the role of low interest rates in causing a hunt for yields in multiple financial markets from hedge funds to emerging markets and that low interest rates foster illiquidity. Rajan (2005, 341) argued:

“The point, therefore, is that common factors such as low interest rates—potentially caused by accommodative monetary policy—can engender excessive tolerance for risk on both sides of financial transactions.”

A critical function of banks consists of providing transformation services that convert illiquid risky loans and investment that the bank monitors into immediate liquidity such as unmonitored demand deposits. Credit in financial markets consists of the transformation of asset-backed securities (SRP) constructed with monitoring by financial institutions into unmonitored immediate liquidity by sale and repurchase agreements (SRP). In the financial crisis financial institutions distrusted the quality of their own balance sheets and those of their counterparties in SRPs. The financing counterparty distrusted that the financed counterparty would not repurchase the assets pledged in the SRP that could collapse in value below the financing provided. A critical problem was the unwillingness of banks to lend to each other in unsecured short-term loans. Emse Bartha, writing on Dec 28, on “Deposits at ECB hit high,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204720204577125913779446088.html?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTWhatsNewsCollection), informs that banks deposited €453.034 billion, or $589.72 billion, at the ECB on Dec 28, which is a record high in two consecutive days. The deposit facility is typically used by banks when they do prefer not to extend unsecured loans to other banks. In addition, banks borrowed €6.225 billion from the overnight facility on Dec 28, when in normal times only a few hundred million euro are borrowed. The collateral issues and the possible increase in counterparty risk occurred a week after large-scale lender of last resort by the ECB in the value of €489 billion in the prior week. The ECB may need to extend its lender of last resort operations.

The financial reform of the United States around the proposal of a national bank by Alexander Hamilton (1780) to develop the money economy with specialization away from the barter economy is credited with creating the financial system that brought prosperity over a long period (see Pelaez 2008). Continuing growth and prosperity together with sound financial management earned the US dollar the role as reserve currency and the AAA rating of its Treasury securities. McKinnon (2011Dec18) analyzes the resolution of the European debt crisis by comparison with the reform of Alexander Hamilton. Northern states of the US had financed the revolutionary war with the issue of paper notes that were at risk of default by 1890. Alexander Hamilton proposed the purchase of the states’ paper notes by the Federal government without haircuts. McKinnon (2011Dec18) describes the conflicts before passing the assumption bill in 1790 for federal absorption of the debts of states. Other elements in the Hamilton reform consisted of creation of a market for US Treasury bonds by their use as paid-in capital in the First Bank of the United States. McKinnon (2011Dec18) finds growth of intermediation in the US by the branching of the First Bank of the United States throughout several states, accepting deposits to provide commercial short-term credit. The reform consolidated the union of states, fiscal credibility for the union and financial intermediation required for growth. The reform also introduced low tariffs and an excise tax on whisky to service the interest on the federal debt. Trade relations among members of the euro zone are highly important to economic activity. There are two lessons drawn by McKinnon (2011Dec18) from the experience of Hamilton for the euro zone currently. (1) The reform of Hamilton included new taxes for the assumption of debts of states with concrete provisions for their credibility. (2) Commercial lending was consolidated with a trusted bank both for accepting private deposits and for commercial lending, creating the structure of financial intermediation required for growth.

IIIE Appendix Euro Zone Survival Risk. Charles Forelle and Stephen Fidler, writing on Dec 10, 2011, on “Questions place EU pact,” published in the Wall Street Journal (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203413304577087562993283958.html?mod=WSJPRO_hpp_LEFTTopStories#project%3DEUSUMMIT121011%26articleTabs%3Darticle), provide data, information and analysis of the agreement of Dec 9. There are multiple issues centering on whether investors will be reassured that the measures have reduced the risks of European sovereign obligations. While the European Central Bank has welcomed the measures, it is not yet clear of its future role in preventing erosion of sovereign debt values.

Another complicating factor is whether there will be further actions on sovereign debt ratings. On Dec 5, 2011, four days before the conclusion of the meeting of European leaders, Standard & Poor’s (2011Dec5) placed the sovereign ratings of 15 members of the euro zone on “CreditWatch with negative implications.” S&P finds five conditions that trigger the action: (1) worsening credit conditions in the euro area; (2) differences among member states on how to manage the debt crisis in the short run and on measures to move toward enhanced fiscal convergence; (3) household and government debt at high levels throughout large parts of the euro area; (4) increasing risk spreads on euro area sovereigns, including those with AAA ratings; and (5) increasing risks of recession in the euro zone. S&P also placed the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) in CreditWatch with negative implications (http://www.standardandpoors.com/ratings/articles/en/us/?articleType=HTML&assetID=1245325307963). On Dec 9, 2011, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the ratings of the three largest French banks (http://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-downgrades-BNP-Paribass-long-term-ratings-to-Aa3-concluding--PR_232989 http://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-downgrades-Credit-Agricole-SAs-long-term-ratings-to-Aa3--PR_233004 http://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-downgrades-Socit-Gnrales-long-term-ratings-to-A1--PR_232986 ).

The euro zone faces a critical survival risk because several of its members may default on their sovereign obligations if not bailed out by the other members. The valuation equation of bonds is essential to understanding the stability of the euro area. An explanation is provided in this paragraph and readers interested in technical details are referred to the following Subsection IIID Appendix on Sovereign Bond Valuation. Contrary to the Wriston doctrine, investing in sovereign obligations is a credit decision. The value of a bond today is equal to the discounted value of future obligations of interest and principal until maturity. On Dec 30 the yield of the 2-year bond of the government of Greece was quoted around 100 percent. In contrast, the 2-year US Treasury note traded at 0.239 percent and the 10-year at 2.871 percent while the comparable 2-year government bond of Germany traded at 0.14 percent and the 10-year government bond of Germany traded at 1.83 percent (see Table III-1). There is no need for sovereign ratings: the perceptions of investors are of relatively higher probability of default by Greece, defying Wriston (1982), and nil probability of default of the US Treasury and the German government. The essence of the sovereign credit decision is whether the sovereign will be able to finance new debt and refinance existing debt without interrupting service of interest and principal. Prices of sovereign bonds incorporate multiple anticipations such as inflation and liquidity premiums of long-term relative to short-term debt but also risk premiums on whether the sovereign’s debt can be managed as it increases without bound. The austerity measures of Italy are designed to increase the primary surplus, or government revenues less expenditures excluding interest, to ensure investors that Italy will have the fiscal strength to manage its debt of 120 percent of GDP, which is the third largest in the world after the US and Japan. Appendix IIE links the expectations on the primary surplus to the real current value of government monetary and fiscal obligations. As Blanchard (2011SepWEO) analyzes, fiscal consolidation to increase the primary surplus is facilitated by growth of the economy. Italy and the other indebted sovereigns in Europe face the dual challenge of increasing primary surpluses while maintaining growth of the economy (for the experience of Brazil in the debt crisis of 1982 see Pelaez 1986, 1987).

Much of the analysis and concern over the euro zone centers on the lack of credibility of the debt of a few countries while there is credibility of the debt of the euro zone as a whole. In practice, there is convergence in valuations and concerns toward the fact that there may not be credibility of the euro zone as a whole. The fluctuations of financial risk assets of members of the euro zone move together with risk aversion toward the countries with lack of debt credibility. This movement raises the need to consider analytically sovereign debt valuation of the euro zone as a whole in the essential analysis of whether the single-currency will survive without major changes.

Welfare economics considers the desirability of alternative states, which in this case would be evaluating the “value” of Germany (1) within and (2) outside the euro zone. Is the sum of the wealth of euro zone countries outside of the euro zone higher than the wealth of these countries maintaining the euro zone? On the choice of indicator of welfare, Hicks (1975, 324) argues:

“Partly as a result of the Keynesian revolution, but more (perhaps) because of statistical labours that were initially quite independent of it, the Social Product has now come right back into its old place. Modern economics—especially modern applied economics—is centered upon the Social Product, the Wealth of Nations, as it was in the days of Smith and Ricardo, but as it was not in the time that came between. So if modern theory is to be effective, if it is to deal with the questions which we in our time want to have answered, the size and growth of the Social Product are among the chief things with which it must concern itself. It is of course the objective Social Product on which attention must be fixed. We have indexes of production; we do not have—it is clear we cannot have—an Index of Welfare.”

If the burden of the debt of the euro zone falls on Germany and France or only on Germany, is the wealth of Germany and France or only Germany higher after breakup of the euro zone or if maintaining the euro zone? In practice, political realities will determine the decision through elections.

The prospects of survival of the euro zone are dire. Table II-2 is constructed with current IMF World Economic Outlook database for GDP in USD billions, primary net lending/borrowing as percent of GDP and general government debt as percent of GDP for selected regions and countries in 2010.

Table III-2, World and Selected Regional and Country GDP and Fiscal Situation

 

GDP 2010
USD Billions

Primary Net Lending Borrowing
% GDP 2010

General Government Net Debt
% GDP 2010

World

62,911.2

   

Euro Zone

12,167.8

-3.6

65.9

Portugal

229.2

-6.3

88.7

Ireland

206.9

-28.9

78.0

Greece

305.4

-4.9

142.8

Spain

1,409.9

-7.8

48.8

Major Advanced Economies G7

31,716.9

-6.5

76.5

United States

14,526.6

-8.4

68.3

UK

2,250.2

-7.7

67.7

Germany

3,286.5

-1.2

57.6

France

2,562.7

-4.9

76.5

Japan

5,458.8

-8.1

117.2

Canada

1,577.0

-4.9

32.2

Italy

2,055.1

-0.3

99.4

China

5,878.3

-2.3

33.8*

Cyprus

23.2

-5.3

61.6

*Gross Debt

Source: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2011/01/weodata/index.aspx

The data in Table II-2 are used for some very simple calculations in Table III-3. The column “Net Debt USD Billions” in Table II-3 is generated by applying the percentage in Table III-2 column “General Government Net Debt % GDP 2010” to the column “GDP USD Billions.” The total debt of France and Germany in 2010 is $3853.5 billion, as shown in row “B+C” in column “Net Debt USD Billions” The sum of the debt of Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and Ireland is $3531.6 billion. There is some simple “unpleasant bond arithmetic” in the two final columns of Table III-3. Suppose the entire debt burdens of the five countries with probability of default were to be guaranteed by France and Germany, which de facto would be required by continuing the euro zone. The sum of the total debt of these five countries and the debt of France and Germany is shown in column “Debt as % of Germany plus France GDP” to reach $7385.1 billion, which would be equivalent to 126.3 percent of their combined GDP in 2010. Under this arrangement the entire debt of the euro zone including debt of France and Germany would not have nil probability of default. The final column provides “Debt as % of Germany GDP” that would exceed 224 percent if including debt of France and 165 percent of German GDP if excluding French debt. The unpleasant bond arithmetic illustrates that there is a limit as to how far Germany and France can go in bailing out the countries with unsustainable sovereign debt without incurring severe pains of their own such as downgrades of their sovereign credit ratings. A central bank is not typically engaged in direct credit because of remembrance of inflation and abuse in the past. There is also a limit to operations of the European Central Bank in doubtful credit obligations. Wriston (1982) would prove to be wrong again that countries do not bankrupt but would have a consolation prize that similar to LBOs the sum of the individual values of euro zone members outside the current agreement exceeds the value of the whole euro zone. Internal rescues of French and German banks may be less costly than bailing out other euro zone countries so that they do not default on French and German banks.

Table III-3, Guarantees of Debt of Sovereigns in Euro Area as Percent of GDP of Germany and France, USD Billions and %

 

Net Debt USD Billions

Debt as % of Germany Plus France GDP

Debt as % of Germany GDP

A Euro Area

8,018.6

   

B Germany

1,893.0

 

$7385.1 as % of $3286.5 =224.7%

$5424.6 as % of $3286.5 =165.1%

C France

1,960.5

   

B+C

3,853.5

GDP $5849.2

Total Debt

$7385.1

Debt/GDP: 126.3%

 

D Italy

2,042.8

   

E Spain

688.0

   

F Portugal

203.3

   

G Greece

436.1

   

H Ireland

161.4

   

Subtotal D+E+F+G+H

3,531.6

   

Source: calculation with IMF data http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2011/01/weodata/index.aspx

There is extremely important information in Table III-4 for the current sovereign risk crisis in the euro zone. Table III-4 provides the structure of regional and country relations of Germany’s exports and imports with newly available data for Oct. German exports to other European Union members are 58.7 percent of total exports in Oct and 59.6 percent in Jan-Oct. Exports to the euro area are 39.0 percent in Oct and 40.0 percent in Jan-Oct. Exports to third countries are only 41.3 percent of the total in Oct and 40.4 percent in Jan-Oct. There is similar distribution for imports. Economic performance in Germany is closely related to its high competitiveness in world markets. Weakness in the euro zone and the European Union in general could affect the German economy. This may be the major reason for choosing the “fiscal abuse” of the European Central Bank considered by Buiter (2011Oct31) over the breakdown of the euro zone. There is a tough analytical, empirical and forecasting doubt of growth and trade in the euro zone and the world with or without maintenance of the European Monetary Union (EMU) or euro zone.

Table III-4, Germany, Structure of Exports and Imports by Region, € Billions and ∆%

 

Oct 2011
€ Billions

12 Months
∆%

Jan-Oct
2011 € Billions

Jan-Oct 2011/
Jan-Oct 2010 ∆%

Total
Exports

89.2

3.8

881.1

12.5

A. EU
Members

52.4

% 58.7

0.8

524.9

% 59.6

11.4

Euro Area

34.8

% 39.0

-0.4

352.1

% 40.0

10.2

Non-euro Area

17.7

% 19.8

3.1

172.7

% 19.6

14.0

B. Third Countries

36.8

% 41.3

8.3

356.2

% 40.4

14.1

Total Imports

77.6

8.6

750.7

14.6

C. EU Members

49.2

% 63.4

7.3

475.9

% 63.4

15.1

Euro Area

33.8

% 43.6

6.1

334.2

% 44.5

14.3

Non-euro Area

15.4

% 19.9

10.2

141.6

% 18.9

17.1

D. Third Countries

28.5

% 36.7

10.9

274.9

% 36.6

13.8

Notes: Total Exports = A+B; Total Imports = C+D

Source: http://www.destatis.de/jetspeed/portal/cms/Sites/destatis/Internet/EN/press/pr/2011/12/PE11__455__51,templateId=renderPrint.psml

IIIF Appendix on Sovereign Bond Valuation. There are two approaches to government finance and their implications: (1) simple unpleasant monetarist arithmetic; and (2) simple unpleasant fiscal arithmetic. Both approaches illustrate how sovereign debt can be perceived riskier under profligacy.

First, Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic. Fiscal policy is described by Sargent and Wallace (1981, 3, equation 1) as a time sequence of D(t), t = 1, 2,…t, …, where D is real government expenditures, excluding interest on government debt, less real tax receipts. D(t) is the real deficit excluding real interest payments measured in real time t goods. Monetary policy is described by a time sequence of H(t), t=1,2,…t, …, with H(t) being the stock of base money at time t. In order to simplify analysis, all government debt is considered as being only for one time period, in the form of a one-period bond B(t), issued at time t-1 and maturing at time t. Denote by R(t-1) the real rate of interest on the one-period bond B(t) between t-1 and t. The measurement of B(t-1) is in terms of t-1 goods and [1+R(t-1)] “is measured in time t goods per unit of time t-1 goods” (Sargent and Wallace 1981, 3). Thus, B(t-1)[1+R(t-1)] brings B(t-1) to maturing time t. B(t) represents borrowing by the government from the private sector from t to t+1 in terms of time t goods. The price level at t is denoted by p(t). The budget constraint of Sargent and Wallace (1981, 3, equation 1) is:

D(t) = {[H(t) – H(t-1)]/p(t)} + {B(t) – B(t-1)[1 + R(t-1)]} (1)

Equation (1) states that the government finances its real deficits into two portions. The first portion, {[H(t) – H(t-1)]/p(t)}, is seigniorage, or “printing money.” The second part,

{B(t) – B(t-1)[1 + R(t-1)]}, is borrowing from the public by issue of interest-bearing securities. Denote population at time t by N(t) and growing by assumption at the constant rate of n, such that:

N(t+1) = (1+n)N(t), n>-1 (2)

The per capita form of the budget constraint is obtained by dividing (1) by N(t) and rearranging:

B(t)/N(t) = {[1+R(t-1)]/(1+n)}x[B(t-1)/N(t-1)]+[D(t)/N(t)] – {[H(t)-H(t-1)]/[N(t)p(t)]} (3)

On the basis of the assumptions of equal constant rate of growth of population and real income, n, constant real rate of return on government securities exceeding growth of economic activity and quantity theory equation of demand for base money, Sargent and Wallace (1981) find that “tighter current monetary policy implies higher future inflation” under fiscal policy dominance of monetary policy. That is, the monetary authority does not permanently influence inflation, lowering inflation now with tighter policy but experiencing higher inflation in the future.

Second, Unpleasant Fiscal Arithmetic. The tool of analysis of Cochrane (2011Jan, 27, equation (16)) is the government debt valuation equation:

(Mt + Bt)/Pt = Et∫(1/Rt, t+τ)stdτ (4)

Equation (4) expresses the monetary, Mt, and debt, Bt, liabilities of the government, divided by the price level, Pt, in terms of the expected value discounted by the ex-post rate on government debt, Rt, t+τ, of the future primary surpluses st, which are equal to TtGt or difference between taxes, T, and government expenditures, G. Cochrane (2010A) provides the link to a web appendix demonstrating that it is possible to discount by the ex post Rt, t+τ. The second equation of Cochrane (2011Jan, 5) is:

MtV(it, ·) = PtYt (5)

Conventional analysis of monetary policy contends that fiscal authorities simply adjust primary surpluses, s, to sanction the price level determined by the monetary authority through equation (5), which deprives the debt valuation equation (4) of any role in price level determination. The simple explanation is (Cochrane 2011Jan, 5):

“We are here to think about what happens when [4] exerts more force on the price level. This change may happen by force, when debt, deficits and distorting taxes become large so the Treasury is unable or refuses to follow. Then [4] determines the price level; monetary policy must follow the fiscal lead and ‘passively’ adjust M to satisfy [5]. This change may also happen by choice; monetary policies may be deliberately passive, in which case there is nothing for the Treasury to follow and [4] determines the price level.”

An intuitive interpretation by Cochrane (2011Jan 4) is that when the current real value of government debt exceeds expected future surpluses, economic agents unload government debt to purchase private assets and goods, resulting in inflation. If the risk premium on government debt declines, government debt becomes more valuable, causing a deflationary effect. If the risk premium on government debt increases, government debt becomes less valuable, causing an inflationary effect.

There are multiple conclusions by Cochrane (2011Jan) on the debt/dollar crisis and Global recession, among which the following three:

(1) The flight to quality that magnified the recession was not from goods into money but from private-sector securities into government debt because of the risk premium on private-sector securities; monetary policy consisted of providing liquidity in private-sector markets suffering stress

(2) Increases in liquidity by open-market operations with short-term securities have no impact; quantitative easing can affect the timing but not the rate of inflation; and purchase of private debt can reverse part of the flight to quality

(3) The debt valuation equation has a similar role as the expectation shifting the Phillips curve such that a fiscal inflation can generate stagflation effects similar to those occurring from a loss of anchoring expectations.

III Global Inflation. There is inflation everywhere in the world economy, with slow growth and persistently high unemployment in advanced economies. Table III-1 updated with every post, provides the latest annual data for GDP, consumer price index (CPI) inflation, producer price index (PPI) inflation and unemployment (UNE) for the advanced economies, China and the highly-indebted European countries with sovereign risk issues. The table now includes the Netherlands and Finland that with Germany make up the set of northern countries in the euro zone that hold key votes in the enhancement of the mechanism for solution of the sovereign risk issues (Peter Spiegel and Quentin Peel, “Europe: Northern Exposures,” Financial Times, Mar 9, 2011 http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/55eaf350-4a8b-11e0-82ab-00144feab49a.html#axzz1gAlaswcW). Newly available data on inflation is considered below in this section. Data in Table III Global Inflation. There is inflation everywhere in the world economy, with slow growth and persistently high unemployment in advanced economies. Table III-1 updated with every post, provides the latest annual data for GDP, consumer price index (CPI) inflation, producer price index (PPI) inflation and unemployment (UNE) for the advanced economies, China and the highly-indebted European countries with sovereign risk issues. The table now includes the Netherlands and Finland that with Germany make up the set of northern countries in the euro zone that hold key votes in the enhancement of the mechanism for solution of the sovereign risk issues (Peter Spiegel and Quentin Peel, “Europe: Northern Exposures,” Financial Times, Mar 9, 2011 http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/55eaf350-4a8b-11e0-82ab-00144feab49a.html#axzz1gAlaswcW). Newly available data on inflation is considered below in this section. Data in Table IV-1 for the euro zone and its members are updated from information provided by Eurostat but individual country information is provided in this section  as soon as available, following Table IV-1. Data for other countries in Table IV-1 are also updated with reports from their statistical agencies. Economic data for major regions and countries is considered in Section V World Economic Slowdown following with individual country and regional data tables for the euro zone and its members are updated from information provided by Eurostat but individual country information is provided in this section  as soon as available, following Table IV-1. Data for other countries in Table IV-1 are also updated with reports from their statistical agencies. Economic data for major regions and countries is considered in Section V World Economic Slowdown following with individual country and regional data tables.

Table IV-1, GDP Growth, Inflation and Unemployment in Selected Countries, Percentage Annual Rates

 

GDP

CPI

PPI

UNE

US

1.5

3.4

5.7

8.6

Japan

-0.7

-0.5

1.7

4.5

China

9.1

4.2

2.7

 

UK

0.5

4.8*
RPI 5.2

5.4* output
13.4*
input
10.0**

8.3

Euro Zone

1.4

2.8

5.3

10.3

Germany

2.6

2.8

5.2

5.5

France

1.6

2.7

5.6

9.8

Nether-lands

1.1

2.7

6.7

4.9

Finland

2.7

3.2

5.8

7.4

Belgium

1.8

3.7

5.7

7.2

Portugal

-1.7

3.8

5.2

13.2

Ireland

NA

1.7

3.8

14.6

Italy

NA

3.7

4.5

8.6

Greece

-5.2

2.8

7.2

18.8

Spain

0.8

2.9

6.3

22.9

Notes: GDP: rate of growth of GDP; CPI: change in consumer price inflation; PPI: producer price inflation; UNE: rate of unemployment; all rates relative to year earlier

*Office for National Statistics

PPI http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/ppi2/producer-price-index/november-2011/index.html

CPI http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/cpi/consumer-price-indices/november-2011/index.html

**Excluding food, beverage, tobacco and petroleum

Source: EUROSTAT; country statistical sources http://www.census.gov/aboutus/stat_int.html

Table IV-1 shows the simultaneous occurrence of low growth, inflation and unemployment in advanced economies. The US grew at 1.5 percent in IIIQ2011 relative to IIIQ2010 (Table 8, p 11 in http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/national/gdp/2011/pdf/gdp3q11_3rd.pdf); Japan’s GDP fell 0.7 percent in IIIQ2011 relative to IIIQ2010 and contracted 1.7 percent in IIQ2011 relative to IIQ2010 because of the Tōhoku or Great East Earthquake and Tsunami of Mar 11, 2011 but grew at the seasonally-adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 5.6 percent in IIIQ2011 (http://www.esri.cao.go.jp/jp/sna/sokuhou/kekka/gaiyou/main_1.pdf and see historical data in IIIB at http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/euro-zone-survival-risk-world-financial_11.html); the UK grew at 0.5 percent in IIIQ2011 relative to IIIQ2010 and 0.6 percent in IIIQ2011 relative to IIQ2011 (http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/naa2/quarterly-national-accounts/q3-2011/index.html); and the Euro Zone grew at 1.4 percent in IIIQ2011 relative to IIIQ2010 (http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/2-06122011-AP/EN/2-06122011-AP-EN.PDF). These are stagnating or “growth recession” rates, which are positive growth rates instead of contractions but insufficient to recover employment. The rates of unemployment are quite high: 8.6 percent in the US but 18.2 percent for unemployment/underemployment (see Table 3 in the text and http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/twenty-nine-million-in-job-stress.html), 4.5 percent for Japan, 8.3 percent for the UK with high rates of unemployment for young people (see the labor statistics of the UK in http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_1721.html) and 10.3 percent in the Euro Zone. Twelve months rates of inflation have been quite high, even when some are moderating at the margin: 3.4 percent in the US, minus 0.2 percent for Japan, 3.0 percent for the Euro Zone and 4.8 percent for the UK. Stagflation is still an unknown event but the risk is sufficiently high to be worthy of consideration (see http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/06/risk-aversion-and-stagflation.html). The analysis of stagflation also permits the identification of important policy issues in solving vulnerabilities that have high impact on global financial risks. There are six key interrelated vulnerabilities in the world economy that have been causing global financial turbulence: (1) sovereign risk issues in Europe resulting from countries in need of fiscal consolidation and enhancement of their sovereign risk ratings (see Section III in this post and the earlier post http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/financial-risk-aversion-and-collapse-of.html) (2) the tradeoff of growth and inflation in China; (3) slow growth by repression of savings with de facto interest rate controls (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/slow-growth-falling-real-disposable.html), weak hiring (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html) and continuing job stress of 24 to 30 million people in the US and stagnant wages in a fractured job market (see Section I Thirty Million Unemployed or Underemployed); (4) the timing, dose, impact and instruments of normalizing monetary and fiscal policies (see II Budget/Debt Quagmire in http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/08/united-states-gdp-growth-standstill.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/is-there-second-act-of-us-great.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/global-financial-risks-and-fed.html http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/policy-inflation-growth-unemployment.html) in advanced and emerging economies; (5) the Tōhoku or Great East Earthquake and Tsunami of Mar 11, 2011 that had repercussions throughout the world economy because of Japan’s share of about 9 percent in world output, role as entry point for business in Asia, key supplier of advanced components and other inputs as well as major role in finance and multiple economic activities (http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704461304576216950927404360.html?mod=WSJ_business_AsiaNewsBucket&mg=reno-wsj); and (6) the geopolitical events in the Middle East.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) did not change the course of monetary policy at its meeting on Dec 13 with the following statement (http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20111213a.htm):

“Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in November suggests that the economy has been expanding moderately, notwithstanding some apparent slowing in global growth. While indicators point to some improvement in overall labor market conditions, the unemployment rate remains elevated. Household spending has continued to advance, but business fixed investment appears to be increasing less rapidly and the housing sector remains depressed. Inflation has moderated since earlier in the year, and longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee continues to expect a moderate pace of economic growth over coming quarters and consequently anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Strains in global financial markets continue to pose significant downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee also anticipates that inflation will settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below those consistent with the Committee’s dual mandate. However, the Committee will continue to pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.

To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with the dual mandate, the Committee decided today to continue its program to extend the average maturity of its holdings of securities as announced in September. The Committee is maintaining its existing policies of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate.

The Committee also decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that economic conditions--including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.

The Committee will continue to assess the economic outlook in light of incoming information and is prepared to employ its tools to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price stability.”

There were no changes of direction in the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) from Nov 1 to Nov 2, 2011. The FOMC released the statement as follows (http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20111102a.htm):

“For immediate release

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in September indicates that economic growth strengthened somewhat in the third quarter, reflecting in part a reversal of the temporary factors that had weighed on growth earlier in the year. Nonetheless, recent indicators point to continuing weakness in overall labor market conditions, and the unemployment rate remains elevated. Household spending has increased at a somewhat faster pace in recent months. Business investment in equipment and software has continued to expand, but investment in nonresidential structures is still weak, and the housing sector remains depressed. Inflation appears to have moderated since earlier in the year as prices of energy and some commodities have declined from their peaks. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee continues to expect a moderate pace of economic growth over coming quarters and consequently anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Moreover, there are significant downside risks to the economic outlook, including strains in global financial markets. The Committee also anticipates that inflation will settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below those consistent with the Committee's dual mandate as the effects of past energy and other commodity price increases dissipate further. However, the Committee will continue to pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.

To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with the dual mandate, the Committee decided today to continue its program to extend the average maturity of its holdings of securities as announced in September. The Committee is maintaining its existing policies of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate.

The Committee also decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that economic conditions--including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.

The Committee will continue to assess the economic outlook in light of incoming information and is prepared to employ its tools to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price stability.”

The FOMC also released the economic projections of governors of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and Federal Reserve Banks presidents shown in Table IV-2. It is instructive to focus on 2012, as 2011 is gone, and there is not much information on what will happen in 2013 and beyond. The central tendency should provide reasonable approximation of the view of the majority of members of the FOMC. The first row for each year shows the projection introduced after the meeting of Nov 2 and the second row “Jun PR” the projection of the Jun meeting. There are three major changes in the view.

1. Growth “GDP ∆.” The FOMC has reduced the forecast of GDP growth in 2012 from 3.3 to 3.7 percent in Jun to 2.5 to 2.9 percent in Nov.

2. Rate of Unemployment “UNEM%.” The FOMC increased the rate of unemployment from 7.8 to 8.2 percent in Jun to 8.5 to 8.7 percent in Nov.

3. Inflation “∆% PCE Inflation.” The FOMC changed the forecast of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation from 1.5 to 2.0 percent in Jun to virtually the same of 1.4 to 2.0 percent in Nov.

Core Inflation “∆% Core PCE Inflation.” Core inflation is PCE inflation excluding food and energy. There is again not much of a difference of the projection for 2012 in Jun of 1.4 to 2.0 percent and the Nov projection of 1.5 to 2.0 percent.

Table IV-2, US, Economic Projections of Federal Reserve Board Members and Federal Reserve Bank Presidents, November 2011

 

∆% GDP

UNEM %

∆% PCE Inflation

∆% Core PCE Inflation

Central
Tendency

       

2011
Jun PR

1.6 – 1.7
2.7 – 2.9

9.0 – 9.1
8.6 – 8.9

2.7 – 2.9
2.3 – 2.5

1.8 – 1.9
1.5 – 1.8

2012
Jun PR

2.5 – 2.9
3.3 – 3.7

8.5 – 8.7
7.8 – 8.2

1.4 – 2.0
1.5 – 2.0

1.5 – 2.0
1.4 – 2.0

2013
Jun PR

3.0 – 3.5 3.5 – 4.2

7.8 – 8.2
7.0 – 7.5

1.5 – 2.0
1.5 – 2.0

1.4 – 1.9
1.4 – 2.0

2014
Jun PR

3.0 – 3.9
NA

6.8 – 7.7
NA

1.5 – 2.0
NA

1.5 – 2.0
NA

Longer Run

2.4 – 2.7
2.5 – 2.8

5.2 – 6.0
5.2 – 5.6

1.7 – 2.0
1.7 – 2.0

 

Range

       

2011
Jun PR

1.6 – 1.8
2.5 – 3.0

8.9 – 9.1
8.4 – 9.1

2.5 – 3.3
2.1 – 3.5

1.7 – 2.0
1.5 – 2.3

2012
Jun PR

2.3 – 3.5
2.2 – 4.0

8.1 – 8.9
7.5 – 8.7

1.4 – 2.8
1.2 – 2.8

1.3 – 2.1
1.2 – 2.5

2013
Jun PR

2.7 – 4.0
3.0 – 4.5

7.5 – 8.4
6.5 – 8.3

1.4 – 2.5
1.3 – 2.5

1.4 – 2.1
1.3 – 2.5

2014
Jun PR

2.7 – 4.5
NA

6.5 – 8.0
NA

1.5 – 2.4
NA

1.4 – 2.2
NA

Longer Run

2.2 – 3.0
2.4 – 3.0

5.0 – 6.0
5.0 – 6.0

1.5 – 2.0
1.5 – 2.0

 

Notes: UEM: unemployment; PR: Projection

Source: http://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20111102.pdf

The producer price index of the euro zone increased 0.2 percent after increasing 0.1 percent in Oct and 0.3 percent in Sep, as shown in Table IV-3. The annual equivalent rate in Jul-Nov is 1.9 percent. Producer price inflation has moderated since May with annual equivalent inflation of only 1.0 percent in May-Nov. Energy inflation has oscillated with the shocks of risk aversion that cause unwinding of carry trade positions from zero interest rates to commodity futures. In the seven months May to Nov, energy prices fell in three. Annual equivalent energy inflation in May-Nov is 3.3 percent but accelerated to 10.9 percent in the quarter Sep-Nov. Prices of capital goods have barely moved with annual equivalent inflation in Jul-Nov of only 0.7 percent. Prices of durable consumer goods have accelerated in Jul-Nov at annual equivalent rate of 3.2 percent compared with only 1.2 percent annual equivalent in Apr-Jun

Table IV-3, Euro Zone, Industrial Producer Prices Month ∆%

 

Nov 2011

Oct
2011

Sep
2011

Aug 2011

Jul 2011

Jun 2011

May 2011

Industry ex
Construction

0.2

0.1

0.3

-0.2

0.4

0.0

-0.2

Industry ex
Construction & Energy

-0.1

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.1

0.1

0.2

Intermediate
Goods

0.4

-0.4

-0.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.2

Energy

0.9

0.7

1.0

-0.8

1.5

-0.3

-1.1

Capital Goods

0.0

0.1

0.0

0.1

0.1

0.2

0.0

Durable Consumer Goods

0.2

0.2

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.0

0.1

Nondurable Consumer Goods

0.3

0.2

0.2

0.2

0.1

0.1

0.3

Source: http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/4-05012012-AP/EN/4-05012012-AP-EN.PDF

Although moderating in recent months, 12 months rate of increase of producer prices in the euro zone continue at relatively high levels, as shown in Table IV-4. In both Sep and Aug, producer prices rose 5.8 percent relative to a year earlier but the rate fell to a revised 5.5 percent in Oct and 5.3 in Nov. Industrial prices excluding construction and energy rose 3.0 percent in the 12 months ending in Nov while energy prices rose 12.3 percent. There is major vulnerability in producer price inflation that can return together with long positions in commodity futures with carry trades from zero interest during relaxation of risk aversion.

Table IV-4, Euro Zone, Industrial Producer Prices 12 Months ∆%

 

Nov
2011

Oct 2011

Sep
2011

Aug 2011

Jul 2011

Jun 2011

May 2011

Industry ex
Construction

5.3

5.5

5.8

5.8

6.1

5.9

6.2

Industry ex
Construction & Energy

3.0

3.2

3.5

3.9

4.0

4.1

4.2

Intermediate
Goods

3.5

4.1

5.0

5.7

6.1

6.3

6.6

Energy

12.3

12.3

12.2

11.4

11.9

10.7

11.8

Capital Goods

1.4

1.5

1.5

1.5

1.5

1.3

1.2

Durable Consumer Goods

2.6

2.5

2.5

2.1

1.9

1.8

1.9

Nondurable Consumer Goods

3.6

3.5

3.5

3.5

3.5

3.7

3.8

Source: http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/4-05012012-AP/EN/4-05012012-AP-EN.PDF

The wave of commodity price increases (http://cmpassocregulationblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/recovery-without-hiring-world-inflation_20.html) in the first four months of 2011 also influenced the surge of consumer price inflation in Italy shown in Table IV-5. Annual equivalent inflation in the first four months of 2011 was 4.9 percent. The crisis of confidence or risk aversion resulted in reversal of carry trades on commodity positions. Consumer price inflation in Italy was subdued in Jun and May at 0.1 percent for annual equivalent 1.2 percent. Annual equivalent inflation in the six months Jul-Dec jumped again to 3.0 percent.

Table IV-5, Italy, Consumer Price Index

 

Month

12 Months

Dec

0.4

3.3

Nov 2011

-0.1

3.3

Oct

0.6

3.4

Sep

0.0

3.0

Aug

0.3

2.8

Jul

0.3

2.7

AE ∆% Jul-Dec

3.0

 

Jun

0.1

2.7

May

0.1

2.6

AE ∆% May-Jun

1.2

 

Apr

0.5

2.6

Mar

0.4

2.5

Feb

0.3

2.4

Jan

0.4

2.1

AE ∆% Jan-Apr

4.9

 

Dec 2010

0.4

1.9

Source: Istituto Nazionale di Statistica

http://www.istat.it/it/archivio/49566

Chart IV-1 of the Istituto Nazionale di Statistica of Italy shows 12 months percentage change of the consumer price index of Italy. The 12 month rates of consumer price inflation also show the acceleration in the beginning of 2011 followed by more moderate inflation and the resurgence after Jul. The data for Dec are still preliminary.

clip_image077

Chart IV-1, Italy, Consumer Prices 12 Months ∆%

Source: Istituto Nazionale di Statistica

http://www.istat.it/en/

Consumer price inflation in Italy by segments in Nov 2011 is provided in Table IV-6. Total consumer price inflation in Nov was 0.4 percent and 3.3 percent in 12 months. Inflation of goods was 0.3 percent and 3.9 percent in 12 months. Prices of durable goods fell 0.1 percent in Nov and increased only 0.8 percent in 12 months, as typical in most countries. Prices of energy goods jumped 1.7 percent in Nov and 13.7 percent in 12 months. Food prices increased only 0.1 percent in Nov and 2.9 percent in 12 months. Prices of services increased 0.4 percent and 2.5 percent in 12 months. Transport prices, also influenced by commodity prices, increased 1.6 percent in Nov and 5.0 percent in 12 months. Carry trades from zero interest rates to positions in commodity futures cause increases in commodity prices. Waves of inflation originate in periods when there is no risk aversion and commodity prices decline during periods of risk aversion.

Table IV-6, Italy, Consumer Price Index and Segments, Month and 12 Months ∆%

Nov 2011

Month ∆%

12 Months ∆%

Total

0.4

3.3

I Goods

0.3

3.9

Food

0.1

2.9

Energy

1.7

13.7

Durable

-0.1

0.8

Nondurable

0.1

1.0

II Services

0.4

2.5

Housing

0.1

2.3

Communications

0.1

2.2

Transport

1.6

5.0

Source: Istituto Nazionale di Statistica

http://www.istat.it/it/archivio/49566

© Carlos M. Pelaez, 2010, 2011

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