
And I'm as middle class as anyone.


ColossalContrarian wrote:Your Xeno friend could even change his name to VaselineFinder2.

Xenophobe wrote:Armageddon wrote:If they can only fix these issues :
1) 23% unemployment
snip
Oh please.
#1 underemployment is not unemployment but lets pump those numbers!
snip



OilFinder2 wrote:As measured by GDP, the old thread(s) is/are now obsolete. We have now officially begun a new chapter in the US economic recovery/expansion.
ArticleRecovery Ends. Expansion Begins.
By: MarketMinder Jan 29, 2011
The US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released its first estimate of Q4 2010 GDP on Friday. The report showed accelerating growth—to 3.2% annualized real GDP growth in Q4, missing analysts' expectations of 3.5%. While some met the report with disappointment, there are also many strong points.
Of note and little mentioned, US real GDP eclipsed its pre-recession peak for the first time (nominal GDP already accomplished that feat), meaning the economic recovery is now over and expansion has officially begun. And headline GDP isn't the only metric that's expanding—personal spending and exports are both above prior highs
The acceleration from Q3 2010's 2.6% growth was largely driven by two contributors: Consumer spending and net exports. Consumer spending posted its largest quarterly increase (+4.4%) in four years, and net exports, a metric reducing GDP in Q2 and Q3 2010, reversed course and added to headline growth.
[...]

Armageddon wrote:I'm self employed and haven't worked in 4 months. Where do I show up at ?
Feb. 2, 2011, 9:05 a.m. EST
U.S. private-sector payrolls up 187,000: ADP
By Ruth Mantell, MarketWatch
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Private-sector employment rose in January, and “strength was evident” in all major industries and sizes of business, according to Automatic Data Processing Inc.’s employment report released Wednesday.
The ADP report showed that private-sector employment rose 187,000, with the service-producing sector gaining 166,000 and the goods-producing sector increasing 21,000.
Employment rose 97,000 at small businesses, 79,000 at medium businesses and 11,000 at large businesses.
For December, ADP reported that private payrolls gained 247,000, compared with a prior estimate of 297,000.
“According to this measure, employment is accelerating and while January’s addition is less than December’s, we remain of the belief that employment gains will continue over the course of the year,” wrote Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist with Miller Tabak, in a research note.
[...]


Report: January job cuts hit record low
South Florida Business Journal
Date: Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 10:31am EST
January job cuts hit a record low, with employers announcing plans to cut 38,519 jobs in the first month of the year, according to job placement firm Challenger Gray & Christmas.
While that’s up from December, when planned layoffs totaled 32,004, it marks the lowest January total since Challenger started keeping track in 1993.
Historically, January is the heaviest job-cut month, according to the report.
“What made this January figure so unusual is that it was so low,” CEO John A. Challenger said in a news release.
[...]


Retailers Posting Surprisingly Strong Sales in January
Published: Thursday, 3 Feb 2011
Fears that winter weather would result in disappointing retail sales were overblown, as several retailers not only reported better-than-expected monthly sales reports, they also raised fourth-quarter earnings estimates.
On average, the retail sector reported same-store sales growth of 4.2 percent, according to Thomson Reuters. That far outpaced the average estimate of 2.7 percent, the group said.
Among the notable surprises were Limited, Zumiez, Wet Seal and Gap, which all reported sales at stores open at least 12 months were higher than analysts' estimates. Some of these companies also raised their forecasts for the latest fiscal quarter.
Limited the parent of Victoria's Secret and Bath & Body Works, reported January sales surged 24 percent, adding to its recent streak of strong results. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters were expected same-store sales to rise 6.7 percent.
[...]


Service Sector Expands at Fastest Pace in 5 Years
Service sector expands in January at fastest pace since 2005 on higher orders, employment
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON February 3, 2011 (AP)
The U.S. service sector, which employs nearly 90 percent of the work force, grew in January at the fastest pace in five years, a sign that hiring could pick up soon.
The Institute for Supply Management, a private trade group, said Thursday its index of service sector activity rose to 59.4 last month, up from December's reading of 57.1. That's the 14th straight month of growth. Any reading above 50 indicates expansion.
The report follows a strong reading on Monday from the institute's manufacturing index for January, which rose to its highest level in nearly seven years.
The service index measures a broad sector of the economy, including retailers, hotels, health care companies and financial firms.
The institute's services employment index rose to 54.5, the highest since May 2006. The employment indexes in the manufacturing and service sector indexes both rose in January, a positive sign that the economy may soon generate more jobs.
[...]
Orders to U.S. Factories Unexpectedly Increased in December
By Bob Willis - Feb 3, 2011 7:00 AM PT
American factories unexpectedly received more orders in December, led by demand for capital equipment that was stronger than reported last week.
The 0.2 percent increase in bookings topped the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News which called for a 0.5 percent drop, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft rose 1.9 percent, up from the 1.4 percent gain the government estimated in last week’s durable goods report.
Manufacturers like Caterpillar Inc. are reporting increased demand from U.S. consumers, businesses and customers in developing countries like Brazil and China. Tax breaks for business investment passed last month may provide further momentum to the factory rebound this year.
“We’re seeing a pretty solid rebound in demand for manufactured goods,” Russell Price, a senior economist at Ameriprise Financial in Detroit, said before the report. “That is exactly what we need to see at this point to make this a self- sustaining recovery.”
[...]



Armageddon wrote:Corn up 103%
Cotton up 173%
Oats up 121%
Wheat up 105%
Soy up 62%
Copper up 68%
Rice up 74%
Lumber up 64%
Food prices just hit a record. Good luck with a recovery.

One month rise was 3.4%, which would translate to almost 40% yearly rise. I imagine this index measures a "basket" of prices collected from different regions, and so averages food production costs in inexpensive growing regions (plenty of water, healthy soils) with areas dependent on pumped irrigation and FF fertilizers. Like the MIDDLE EAST. This can't have anything to do with instability in certain desert nations? Or historically high of crude prices?Release date: 03/02/2011 wrote:The FAO Food Price Index (FFPI) rose for the seventh consecutive month, averaging 231 points in January 2011, up 3.4 percent from December 2010 and the highest (in both real and nominal terms) since the index has been backtracked in 1990.


Armageddon wrote:Copper up 68%
Lumber up 64%
Food prices just hit a record. Good luck with a recovery.


Armageddon wrote:Corn up 103%
Cotton up 173%
Oats up 121%
Wheat up 105%
Soy up 62%
Copper up 68%
Rice up 74%
Lumber up 64%
Food prices just hit a record. Good luck with a recovery.
US economic recovery is complete. Expansion has begun.

MichaelWallace wrote:Armageddon wrote:Corn up 103%
Cotton up 173%
Oats up 121%
Wheat up 105%
Soy up 62%
Copper up 68%
Rice up 74%
Lumber up 64%
Food prices just hit a record. Good luck with a recovery.
Since when? Yesterday? YTD? The end of the recession? The surrender of Japan? And is that real or nominal? These numbers are meaningless without more information.



The true cost of the bank bailoutAccording to a team at Bloomberg News, at one point last year the U.S. had lent, spent or guaranteed as much as $12.8 trillion to rescue the economy. The Bloomberg reporters have been following that money.

OilFinder2 wrote:^
What does that have to do with anything? Thanks to the Obama SS withholding tax cut, I've been getting an extra $40 or so in take home pay this year. And thanks to my purchase of a new house last year I'll be getting a huge deduction on my taxes that I've never had before. So THERE!And I'm as middle class as anyone.
These blanket statements about "the middle class is blah blah blah" are pretty meaningless. You're characterizing a huge and economically diverse segment of the population who are in an unimaginably huge variety of situations. Some are doing fine, others not, some in-between. You make it sound like they're being all thrown out on the street because they're out of a job and can't find a new one, and all their houses are being foreclosed and yadda yadda yadda. Accentuate the negative and pretend the whole segment of the population is like that. Yeah, sure.

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