Friday, February 6, 2009

Clearly this kind of spike is scarily extreme, and equally clearly it's not showing any signs of slowing down.

From Felix Salmon:

"
Chart of the Day: Spiking Unemployment

Jake at EconomPic Data has the chart: narrow unemployment is now at 7.6%, while the broader measure of underemployment is a whopping 13.9%.

Unemp1.jpg

Clearly this kind of spike is scarily extreme, and equally clearly it's not showing any signs of slowing down. The AP does a good job of stating the obvious in its that's-weird-why-are-stocks-rising report:

Jobs are important to the stock market because if people are unemployed, they aren't likely to maintain their spending, buy a house or keep up with their debt payments. And three of the biggest problems facing the economy are dampened consumer spending, the housing market's slide and accelerating loan defaults.

Not to mention the fact that we're going to embark upon a wave of corporate debt defaults very soon now. It's all well and good to mark down bond prices to anticipate a higher default rate, but when it happens it's always a shock.

I still think that things are going to get worse before they get worse: I just can't for the life of me see the engine for any recovery. Certainly the stimulus bill isn't going to do it on its own -- the economic problems facing the US are so large that the government can at best only try to make things slightly less bad than they otherwise might have been. But just as the boom fed on itself, so does the bust. Which means that this recession could drag on for a very long time yet."

Me:

This is very bad. With the Productivity numbers, this is evidence of a Proactivity Run ( Part of Fisher's Debt-Deflation ). In other words, employers are shedding workers in anticipation of a deep bottom and faster than the actual drop in demand. Of course, this has been happening since the middle of November.

It's evidence that we've been putting in place the wrong responses. After all, we're trying to avoid Debt-Deflation and it keeps getting worse. I won't say what the correct policies should be, since no one cares, but people should really read Fisher to understand what we're up against.

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