Sunday, July 06, 2008

How Are We Doing? Pretty Good Actually!



The American economy is in a rough patch. But the long-term trends are good—and there is a price to economic pessimism.

When a presidential election year collides with iffy economic times, the public’s view of the U.S. economy turns gloomy. Perspective shrinks in favor of short-term assessments that focus on such unpleasant realities as falling job counts, sluggish GDP growth, uncertain incomes, rising oil and food prices, subprime mortgage woes, and wobbly financial markets.

Taken together, it’s enough to shake our faith in American progress. The best path to reviving that faith lies in gaining some perspective— getting out of the short-term rut, casting off the blinders that focus us on what will turn out to be mere footnotes in a longer-term march of progress. Once we do that, we see the U.S. economy, a $14 trillion behemoth, is doing quite well, thank you very much.

So many data points add up to steady, continuing progress for average Americans—and there’s no reason not to expect the future will bring further progress (see examples in the charts above). Bad news will pop up from time to time, just as it has in every decade of American history. Some people will take the negatives—the hiccups on the long road to progress—for harbingers of worse times to come.

W. Michael Cox and Richard Alm of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas answer the question "How Are We Doing?" The answer is "pretty good."

11 Comments:

At 7/06/2008 10:51 AM, Blogger juandos said...

Yes, things could be worse...

MITCHELL SCHNURMAN says: In Texas, economy could be a lot worse

From Main Street to Wall Street, the economic news gets more depressing every day, but things could be worse: You could be living outside of Texas.

Last week, the government reported that the U.S. economy lost 62,000 jobs in June, the sixth consecutive monthly decline. Separately, a Chicago consulting company said that layoff announcements rose 21 percent in the first half of 2008, with the list of shrinking employers including stellar names like Goldman Sachs.

Texas, meanwhile, keeps purring along. The economy is slowing, to be sure, and corporate layoffs are rising, but the state remains in positive territory by most measures. Even construction employment, down 5.2 percent nationwide in the past year, was up 3.6 percent here.

"We’re feeling an impact from the slowdown, but in economics, everything is relative," says Cheryl Abbot, regional economist with the Dallas office of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.(there is more)

 
At 7/06/2008 11:09 AM, Blogger K T Cat said...

What if I don't like onions? In your top graphic it says I can buy more of them. Why would I want more of them if I don't like them?

See? The economy is getting worse. Thanks to George Bush and onions, this is the worst economy in a zillion years!

 
At 7/06/2008 2:39 PM, Blogger juandos said...

"What if I don't like onions? In your top graphic it says I can buy more of them. Why would I want more of them if I don't like them?"...

Come on now k t cat you don't have to eat them...:-)

 
At 7/06/2008 8:30 PM, Blogger K T Cat said...

Oh great, now I've got a bunch of onions just laying around the house, rotting.

I told you this was a terrible economy! It's gotten to the point where the American consumer has to pay too much for rotting onions!

(Do you think I've got a future in politics?)

 
At 7/07/2008 3:39 PM, Blogger juandos said...

"It's gotten to the point where the American consumer has to pay too much for rotting onions!"...

Come on k t cat, if Billy Mays can sell some overpriced crappy light switches, just think of what you could do with aging onions?....:-)

Sure I think you have a future in politics...

 
At 7/07/2008 4:15 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Was expecting there to be a least one serious complainer.

Good post. Will save this one for my family members who keep telling me how bad life is. Who says there is no God :)

 
At 7/07/2008 5:17 PM, Blogger OBloodyHell said...

> (Do you think I've got a future in politics?)

Only if you run as a Democrat (assuming a McCain win, too).

"My Eyes!! My Eyes!! I'm blind!!" The Horror!! The Horror!!

 
At 7/07/2008 5:19 PM, Blogger OBloodyHell said...

> Was expecting there to be a least one serious complainer.

Awww, who says K.T. wasn't complaining seriously? Maybe he was channelling Jimmy Carter...

 
At 7/07/2008 7:37 PM, Blogger juandos said...

"Awww, who says K.T. wasn't complaining seriously? Maybe he was channelling Jimmy Carter..."...

OUCH!...:-)

 
At 7/07/2008 8:38 PM, Blogger OBloodyHell said...

> "Awww, who says K.T. wasn't complaining seriously? Maybe he was channelling Jimmy Carter..."...

OUCH!...:-)


... Barbara Streisand?

:oP

 
At 7/12/2008 8:15 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"How Are We Doing? Pretty Good Actually!"

I'll bet the authors are. Especially if all their work is like this one and no one bothers to notice that you can't check their sources. You'd think such academic guys would be more in the know when it comes to citations. Meanwhile, their misinformation snowballs.

 

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