Monday, April 30, 2012

1 in 2 new graduates are jobless or underemployed


Yahoo NEWS by Hope Yen

WASHINGTON (AP) — The college class of 2012 is in for a rude welcome to the world of work.
A weak labor market already has left half of young college graduates either jobless or underemployed in positions that don't fully use their skills and knowledge.
Young adults with bachelor's degrees are increasingly scraping by in lower-wage jobs — waiter or waitress, bartender, retail clerk or receptionist, for example — and that's confounding their hopes a degree would pay off despite higher tuition and mounting student loans.
An analysis of government data conducted for The Associated Press lays bare the highly uneven prospects for holders of bachelor's degrees.
Opportunities for college graduates vary widely.  MORE.......................

US introduces $60 LED light bulb

BBC News
View Original Article HERE


A prize-winning light bulb that lasts for 20 years is going on sale in the US on Sunday - also known as Earth Day.



Made by Dutch electronics giant Philips, the bulb swaps filaments for light-emitting diodes to provide illumination.
Using LEDs endows the light with a long life and a hefty price tag. The first versions are set to cost $60 (£37).
Philips has arranged discounts with shops that will sell the bulb meaning some could buy it for only $20 (£12). MORE...........................................

Thursday, April 26, 2012

President Obama's Economic Programs Have Failed


Us News by Mortimer Zuckerman

America has long been a country where almost everyone, including the poor and unskilled, could get a job. Given the will to do a reasonable day's work, a job was a passport to economic and social well-being; it was the fount of self-esteem and the foundation of family life. Indeed, work was Life.
More than 15 million Americans no longer have that passport to Life. Think of it as roughly the entire population of the states of Connecticut, Delaware, Arkansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma, all standing idle—every man, woman, and child. The traditional breadwinners, namely men between the ages of 25 and 54, are among those hardest hit. According to an Investor's Business Daily/TIPP poll, some 25 percent of households include someone who is unemployed and looking for work. As well as laying waste to work, to the equivalent of losing every job created in the last decade, the Great Recession has visited us with reduced incomes, declining home equity, and a growing contraction in credit.  MORE....................

Monday, April 23, 2012

Weekly Jobless Claims Hit Higher Level Than Expected

CNBC by Reuters
View Original Article HERE

New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits fell less than expected last week, according to a government report on Thursday that could dampen hopes of a pick-up in job creation in April after March's slowdown.
Initial claims for state unemployment  benefits slipped 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 386,000, the Labor Department said. But the prior week's figure was revised up to 388,000 from the previously reported 380,000.
The four-week moving average for new claims, considered a better measure of labor market trends, rose 5,500 to 374,750.   MORE.................

Gun industry’s economic impact skyrockets during Obama years

The Washington Times by Tim Devaney
View Original Article HERE


The economic impact of the firearms industry is up 66 percent since the beginning of the Great Recession, providing an unexpected shot in the arm for the economy, according to a new study.
The National Shooting Sports Foundation says the economic impact of firearm sales — a figure that includes jobs. taxes and sales — hit $31 billion in 2011, up from $19 billion in 2008.
Jobs in the firearms business jumped 30 percent from 2008 to 2011, when the industry employed 98,750.
The industry paid $2.5 billion in federal taxes in 2011, up 66 percent in three years.  MORE.......

Friday, April 20, 2012

Zoning the ocean

Human Events by Audrey Hudson
View Original Article HERE


Here's how it could happen.  Total control of everything by bureaucrats.

President Barack Obama has an ambitious plan for Washington bureaucrats to take command of the oceans—and with it control over much of the nation’s energy, fisheries, even recreation in a move described by lawmakers as the ultimate power grab to zone the seas.

The massive undertaking also includes control over key inland waterways and rivers that reach hundreds of miles upstream, and began with little fanfare when Obama signed an executive order in 2010 to protect the aquatic environment.

“This one to me could be the sleeping power grab that Americans will wake up to one day and wonder what the heck hit them,” said Rep. Bill Flores (R –Texas).

“This is pure administrative fiat,” said Sen. David Vitter (R –La.). “It’s very troubling.”

“This is purely a unilateral administrative action with no real congressional input or oversight,” Vitter said. “I think it clearly threatens to have a big impact on a lot of industry, starting with energy, oil and gas, and fishing.”

MORE..............................

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Hotels, rec centers try to slow pool access regs

My Way by Russ Bynum
View Original Article HERE

Without some flexibility by the rule makers, you can guarantee some pools won't be able to open.

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - Owners and managers of swimming pools at hotels, city recreation centers and public parks are scrambling to install mechanical chair lifts to comply with new federal requirements that all public pools be accessible to disabled swimmers.

Some hotels fear the cost of the equipment or fines for noncompliance could put them out of business, and an industry lobbyist says others may close their pools this summer if they can't upgrade in time, though the government can offer more time to those having trouble paying for it. Swimmers with disabilities say the changes are overdue. MORE..............................

Where Delaware is headed

The Baltimore Sun by Larry Hogan

View Original Article Here

The majority party in Delaware has a two thirds majority in each chamber and has held the Governor's office for 20 years. We are showing every sign of going down the same road as Maryland.

Why do Annapolis leaders do these things? Because they can

Arrogance of one-party rule has led Maryland to this sorry state of affairs

This year, the most curious moment of the legislative session was not the budgetary train wreck on its fractious final day but at a most unusual rally a week before. A crowd of wind energy activists converged on the State House. Surreal chants of "All we are saying is give wind a chance" permeated the air. Gov.Martin O'Malleywas there to greet them, like a minister addressing the faithful.

Of course, reasonable people can disagree over the wisdom of the governor's unsuccessful wind energy proposal. But the timing of the rally struck me as especially curious.

Why would state leaders elevate this boutique, quixotic proposal over more immediate priorities impacting the lives of Marylanders, like the state budget? Then it occurred to me: Because they can. MORE..........................


Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Delawareans Work Longer to Pay “The Man”

For Immediate Release: Monday, April 16, 2011
For More Information, Contact: Joe Fulgham, (302) 744-4184

One hundred and seven days* – that is how long the average Delawarean will work to pay their federal, state and local taxes this year. “If you were to add up all the tax obligations of our residents, all the money they’ve earned since the start of the year into tomorrow would be needed to satisfy that burden,” said State Rep. Deborah Hudson, R-Fairthorne, a member of the House Finance Committee. “The good news is that Delaware’s Tax Freedom Day is Tuesday (4/17),” Rep. Hudson said. “At some point on the 17th, our citizens will stop working for government and start working for themselves.” The Tax Foundation – a Washington, D.C. based non-partisan research group – calculates Tax Freedom Day annually for each state and the nation as a whole using income and tax data reported by government agencies. “Americans now pay more in taxes than they spend on food, clothing and housing combined,” said Tax Foundation economist Dr. William McBride. The tax burden placed on Delawareans is the 17th highest in the nation, tied with Idaho and Utah, and four spots higher than last year’s ranking. “There are 31 states that celebrated their Tax Freedom Day before we did this year,” Rep. Hudson said. Tennessee had the earliest Tax Freedom Day on March 31st, followed by Louisiana and Mississippi the next day. The highest three states for taxation were Connecticut, which does not have its Tax Freedom Day until May 5th, New Jersey and New York. “It should concern Delaware residents that we’re a lot closer to the top of this list than the bottom,” Rep. Hudson said. A member of the Delaware Financial Advisory Council, which is responsible for estimating state revenue, Rep. Hudson noted that state spending continues to increase while major revenue sources, like the corporate franchise tax and slot machine proceeds, are falling or flat. Over the last 10 years, Delaware’s operating budget has grown by more than $1.206 billion – a 52.4 percent increase over the FY 2002 budget. Delaware’s Tax Freedom Day falls on the same day as Tax Freedom Day for the nation. “That is four days later than last year and a full week later than it was in 2009,” Dr. McBride said. However, Dr. McBride notes the national Tax Freedom Day is something of an illusion because of the federal government’s deficit spending. “In order to pay for all spending in the current year, the [federal] government would need to raise an additional $1.014 trillion in taxes, pushing Tax Freedom Day to May 14th,” he said. Overall, Dr. McBride says Americans will pay $2.62 trillion in federal taxes and $1.42 trillion in state and local taxes out of $13.86 trillion in income, for a combined tax rate of 29.2 percent.### * - Tax Foundation calculations do not include Leap Day so as to provide comparability of figures with those in previous reports.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Here’s how big the potential 2013 tax hikes would be


The ENTERPRISEBLOG by James Pethokoukis
View Original Article HERE

If you combine all the other tax increases from 1980-1993, they add up to 3.3% of GDP, according to the brilliant budget team at Strategas Research. The coming “taxmageddon” of 2013 surpasses all those tax hikes combined! How could the Obama White House even toy with the idea, which it has, of letting them happen?

Too Big to Fail Banks get Even Bigger

BLOOMBERG by David J Lynch
View Original Article HERE

Two years after President Barack Obama vowed to eliminate the danger of financial institutions becoming “too big to fail,” the nation’s largest banks are bigger than they were before the nation’s credit markets seized up and required unprecedented bailouts by the government.

Five banks -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Bank of America Corp. (BAC), Citigroup Inc., Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. -- held $8.5 trillion in assets at the end of 2011, equal to 56 percent of the U.S. economy, according to central bankers at the Federal Reserve. MORE...........................

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Harvard’s Ferguson: U.S. Losing Edge, Thanks to Regulation

by Greg Brown

The United States is slipping behind in its global competitiveness, a trend many business and political leaders fail to realize, says Harvard professor Niall Ferguson.Referring to a recent survey of more than 1,000 Harvard Business School alumni, he points out that just 16 percent favored the United States as a place to locate a business.“The answers were fascinating: regulation, uncertainty about taxation and macroeconomic policy, as well as the issue of poor skills based on the educational outcomes,” Ferguson told Bloomberg TV in an interview.
Particularly, in terms of regulatory issues, “the United States is declining in terms of competitiveness,” Ferguson said.America is losing ground, of course, to China, Ferguson said. The World Economic Forum’s competitiveness rankings show that.Since the organization standardized its methods seven years ago, “the U.S. has lost 7 percent and China is up 20 percent,” Ferguson notes.But it’s not just China. In the 15 competitiveness measures tracked by the group, rating such features as regulation and rule of law, “Canada beats the United States on all 15,” he said. The U.S. economy generated just 120,000 net jobs in March, far below the 200,000-job pace of the past few months.Former Reagan adviser Art Laffer argues that President Obama is missing the point if he believes Washington has the answers."What Obama is missing is that government spending doesn't create jobs, it destroys jobs," Laffer told CNBC. "The tooth fairy doesn't work on the Treasury staff.”

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Small Banks Shift Charters to Avoid U.S. as Regulator


The New York Times by Jessica Silver-Greenberg

View Original Article HERE

A small community bank in New Hampshire found a demand from its regulator last month just too much.

Monadnock Community Bank in Peterborough was ordered to do a thorough review of how it collected payments on its delinquent loans, said William Pierce, the chief executive. That meant diverting three of its 18 employees to comb through reams of mortgages MORE.................

Monday, April 9, 2012

The Six States Where Taxes Are Soaring

FOX Business
View Original Article HERE



According to this report, Delaware has increased taxes more than any other state in the nation!


As the economy struggles to recover, state and federal budget deficits continue to be the subject of increased attention. Just last week, the congressional budget office said that President Obama’s budget will produce a $1.3 trillion deficit in 2012 if enacted. It would be the fourth straight year of $1 trillion-plus deficits.


Many states have not been faring much better in their attempts to balance the budget. The recent recession resulted in some of the worst declines in state revenue since World War II, according to a recent report on state budgets by the Brookings Institution. In fiscal year 2010, a record 43 states faced budget deficits. In their fight to shrink their deficits, states have cut spending by slashing programs and lowering costs, while increasing revenue mostly by raising taxes. MORE...........




The Eight Countries Taxing Business Most

24/7 Wall Street

View Original Article HERE

Many of the world’s industrialized countries have scrambled to cut their corporate tax rates to stay competitive in the face of the economic crisis. The United States is not among them. Recently, the U.S. became the industrialized nation with the highest statutory corporate tax rate.

The U.S. is not the only country with an above-average corporate tax rate. Among the 34 OECD countries, eight currently have corporate tax rates that exceed the group’s weighted average of 29.3%. 24/7 Wall St. has reviewed the tax rates of these countries and examined any recent changes countries may have made. MORE.................




Thursday, April 5, 2012

German finance minister: We're Greece's scapegoat

60 MINUTES

View Original Article and Video HERE


The ill will many Greeks feel toward Germany for imposing painful financial conditions on the massive loans the country made to them are just a normal response to a difficult situation, says German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. It's natural for people suffering from their own mistakes to blame others, Schaeuble tells Steve Kroft for a story explaining Europe's debt crisis - a scenario that could worsen and affect the U.S. economic recovery. Kroft's report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes Sunday, April 8 at 7 p.m. ET/PT. MORE.........................

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Moody's Downgrades Greece to Lowest Rating on Scale

CNBC by AP

View Original Article HERE

The ratings agency Moody's has downgraded Greece to the lowest rating on its bond scale, following a deal with private investors that would see them ultimately lose 70 percent of their holdings in Greek debt.

Moody's late Friday lowered Greece's sovereign rating to "C" from "Ca," arguing that the risk of default remains high even a bond-swap deal with banks and other private investors, due to be completed this month, is successful.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor's took similar action on Feb. 27.

Greece's deep and MORE..................

03.26.12 Japan’s “Temporary” Worker Problem…



When Will Central Banks Learn?
It’s Like a Rerun of a Bad Movie…Dear Boom & Bust Subscriber, • Japan’s “lost decades” are old news. Everyone and his dog has heard how its stock market benchmark, the Nikkei, peaked in 1989… then plummeted 75% over the next 20 years. In 2010, Japan humiliatingly lost its position as the world’s second largest economy to supercharged China. It’s been a long and hard fall for Japan. But why should you care now? Because the country is about to fall further. • Japan just posted its first trade deficit since 1980. That means the country now imports more than it exports. This is a seismic shift in momentum. The country that once relied on money within its borders – from the savings of corporations, workers and pension funds – to buy Japanese government debt must now start asking foreign investors for money. And Japan needs a fortune. Its debt-to-GDP ratio is now more than 230%! That’s far more debt than what the likes of Greece, Spain, Portugal, or any other developed nation currently considered “at risk” owes. Yet the country continues to “function.”

• This is possible because Japan has protected the wealth and status of certain groups, while shifting economic burdens onto the backs of other segments of the population. In particular, it created a pool of “temp” workers that has steadily overwhelmed the Japanese work environment. These temp workers get neither health benefits nor pensions. They are not guaranteed work from one day to the next. And they receive much less pay. In fact, roughly 90% of Japan’s temp workers make less than $20,000 compared with 10% of the full time, “regular” workers who earn as little. Look…• This is where it gets more interesting. Most temp workers in Japan are younger than 34. This means the older Japanese workers are maintaining their grip on the more permanent, full-time positions. As a result, the youth of Japan find themselves unable to grow their personal lives, get married or have children. The long run implications of this will be catastrophic. The youth of Japan has no money to spend. So the Japanese middle class is shrinking at breakneck speeds. • Not surprisingly, the money that the Japanese government has relied on for so long is vanishing along with the middle class. As the tide turns, Japan will have to seek outside investors to buy its debt. • It’ll be a tough sell, especially as the yen continues to weaken thanks to Japanese quantitative easing. As the yen declines, Japanese bondholders lose money. Soon, they’ll demand interest rates above the current 1% to 2% level. This will make Japan’s debt burden more unsustainable. In short, the Japanese economy faces a shock in the months and years ahead. Watch for the yen to drop back to 100 yen to the dollar. As wood cutters yell before their giant redwood is about to topple… “Timmmmberrrrr.”• While you watch a once great nation collapse, take note of the parallels between what’s going on in Japan and what’s going on locally… • Since 1989, Japan has suffered deflation in 1995, every year from 1999 through 2003 and again in 2005, 2009 and 2011. In response, the Japanese government stimulated the economy by encouraging the Bank of Japan to print trillions of yen. They used this money to buy trillions worth of Japanese government bonds. As a result, Japan’s 10-year bonds have been around 1% for decades. • Now reread those last few lines and substitute “America” when you see the word “Japan” and “the Fed” when you see “Bank of Japan.” In spite of everything Japan has done in an attempt to stave off the inevitable winter shakeout, it has not worked. Nor will this approach work in the U.S. It’s like a rerun of a bad movie…• This brings us to a question from subscriber John W. He emailed the following: “Hey guys, I’m right on board with you. I saw Harry on Bloomberg just recently where he backed away from 2012 as the bust year. The logic why was sound and you guys did project an uptrend in the 4th and 1st quarters (which came true). Hard to predict the impact of the Fed when they keep spiking the bowl. Question: Why haven’t I seen any reference to the 2013/2014 adjusted timetable in the newsletter? It seems like in the newsletter and emails you’re still projecting a bust in 2012. If your forecasts have justifiably changed recently, I’d love to know how it specifically affects you latest timing projections and positions. I’m sitting mostly in cash waiting for the fire sale and thinking I might need to get more proactive if we have another 12-18 months. Did I miss a communication?” Rodney answers: We know this is a question for many of you, so recently we sent you an email that explains our views on Dow 13,000. You can read that here if you missed it. In the meantime, here’s what we see happening ahead… Given the coordinated central bank easing, our forecasts for a significant market crash have been pushed back to mid-2013. The story we’ve just told about Japan proves there is always a day of reckoning. Sometimes it takes a couple of years to come… something a couple of decades. But it always comes. We’d be better off, in the United States, if we didn’t follow Japan’s example. We should allow the deleveraging process to happen instead of fighting it tooth and nail with stimulus. Of course, that’ll never happen. So we adjust our forecasts and investment recommendations accordingly.Rest assured that all our research still points to the same conclusion… only a few months further down the road than we originally anticipated. In your April issue of Boom & Bust, we’ll give you details of what portfolio changes to make to take advantage of the election year “fever” and the additional quantitative easing we see ahead. Watch out for this in your inbox soon. We’re working to build a balanced portfolio. This shift in our time frame is in fact one of the reasons we split the portfolio into “Booms” and “Busts.” These will ensure we’re positioned to the short side for when the crash comes, but also profit while the Fed “spikes the punch bowl,” as you say.• The question really should be: when will central banks learn that there is no way to stimulate out of the demographic-lead winter season? As we see from the example Japan is setting, they only learn when they have no more bullets left to fire Until next week,

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Bernanke to Congress: We're Much Closer to Total Destruction Than You Think


CNBC NetNet by John Carney

Official Congressional budget estimates understate the peril of rising debt, Fed chair Ben Bernanke told the Budget Committee on Capitol Hill today.

Warning that our nation's fiscal health has deteriorated appreciably since the onset of the financial crisis and the recession, Bernanke called upon lawmakers to confront the long term fiscal challenges sooner rather than later. If lawmakers don't confront them, they'll find themselves confronted by them.

From Bernanke's prepared remarks: MORE........................

RAHN: No more GOP whining about overregulation


The Washington Times by Richard W. Rahn
View Original Article HERE

The Supreme Court last week ruled against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in a unanimous decision. The EPA had charged a couple with violating the Clean Water Act. It claimed their property was a “wetland” and said it would fine them up to $75,000 per day - but there was no water on the property and there had been no judicial review of the charge. Where are the members of Congress whose funding enables the EPA to engage in this tyranny?

We are used to various government agencies overreaching and then seeing members of Congress go on TV and complain about what the government agencies are doing. The fact is, Congress (both parties are guilty) has failed in its oversight responsibilities and continues to fund agencies that ignore both the Constitution and the law. MORE...............

Sunday, April 1, 2012

No, This Is Not a Housing Recovery

REASON.com by Anthony Randazzo

Anyone who says we are in the midst of a housing recovery is wrong.

We have not reached the bottom of the housing market. I hate to say it. I really do hate to always be the pessimist. And I don’t say this because I’ve been steeped in a couple decades' worth of bitterness as a Red Sox fan. The numbers are just not adding up to recovery.

It is all the rage these days to talk about how we are finally seeing recovery in the housing market, and that pretty soon we’ll be back to home price growth. Analysts point to the decline in housing inventory, lower rates of unemployment, higher rates of affordability, increases in housing starts, and even growing stock values for publicly traded homebuilders. MORE.......................