Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Thursday, July 02, 2009
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
June Jobs Tell a Bad Story
by Larry Kudlow
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


After nine months of explosive monetary and fiscal stimulus, you’d think economic recovery would be upon us. But the June jobs report tells a much different story.

Non-farm payrolls fell by 467,000 as the unemployment rate edged up to 9.5 percent. This isn’t nearly as bad as the 700,000 monthly job losses of last winter, but it’s still a rough number. Equally disappointing is the household survey -- often a key turning-point signal since it captures the health of small businesses -- which has dropped 811,000 in the past two months.  

Donald Marron, a former senior economist with the Council of Economic Advisors and the CBO, calls it “a grim jobs report.” Marron, digging deep into the Labor Department Statistics, says the continued decline in hours worked by private-sector employees, now 7 percent over the past year, is especially troublesome. He writes, “The economy is thus losing jobs and, for the jobs that remain, is losing hours worked. That double-whammy is bad news for the economy.”

I would add that along with manufacturing and construction, the service sector continues to shed jobs, with a 244,000 drop in June. Inside that category, the important professional-and-business-services sector lost 118,000 jobs. The wage data is equally disconcerting. Over the past three months, average hourly earnings barely rose at 0.7 percent annually.

There are still some bright spots that strongly suggest the recession has bottomed. The ISM manufacturing report for June held a number of positives. Auto sales, retail sales, and home sales look to be bottoming. And May factory orders climbed as inventories crashed. So businesses, including automakers, may be increasing production in the months ahead.

In fact, even while second-quarter real GDP is expected to fall by 1 to 2 percent annually -- much better than the 6 percent declines of recent quarters -- the third quarter could show a small positive GDP score. Much smaller GDP subtraction from inventories, housing, and business cap-ex bodes statistically well for growth.

But there won’t be a real recovery until jobs start rising. The unemployment rate is a lagging indicator. But jobs are the most important coincident indicator of the economy. Until they turn around, nobody should expect anything resembling real economic growth.

Leading indicators -- especially monetary, financial, and credit-market signals -- are flashing “go” for future growth. The Fed has pumped roughly $1 trillion into the economy since last August. Key money-supply measures are growing at 10 to 15 percent annually. Short-term rates are near zero. The Treasury curve is steeply upward-sloping. Corporate-bond-market spreads have declined significantly. And commodity prices are off their lows. This is all good.

But for all the Fed’s stimulus, which has had a salutary effect on the banking crisis, the lags are long and variable. And as former Dallas Fed head Robert McTeer has written, much of the central bank’s balance-sheet expansion is being hoarded by commercial banks, with banks holding about $800 billion more than what they’re required to hold. Until these excess reserves come way down, the impact of the Fed’s monetary stimulus will be more muted than has traditionally been the case in Milton Freidman’s monetarist model.

And as Washington economist Bruce Bartlett has written, Obama’s $800 billion fiscal-stimulus package has yet to stimulate. Bartlett notes that 60 percent of the stimulus package goes to transfer payments and tax credits with no incentive effects. Meanwhile, the rest of the package, aimed at public works that might produce growth, is spending out at a snail’s pace.

As an old-fashioned supply-side guy who is out of date with contemporary Washington policies, I would add that Obama’s biggest mistake was not cutting marginal tax rates for individuals, businesses, and investors. Instead of the fiscal profligacy that is driving spending and borrowing sky-high, lower tax rates with true incentive-reward effects would have reignited the animal spirits that are sagging so badly.

But Obama’s temporary tax credits and social spending offer no growth effects. At the same time, the government’s fiscal nymphomania has scared everyone into thinking the U.S. is going bankrupt. The president himself has said there’s no money left. It’s scary enough to keep your savings under the mattress.

And if you add all the talk of nationalizing health care and energy (cap-and-trade) to the rest of Bailout Nation, it’s not hard to understand why people are shying from risk.

Stocks are the single-best barometer of our nation’s future economic health, and the stock market began to rise in early March. But over the past month, with all these new big-government tax-and-regulatory threats, the stock rally has stalled. And the June jobs report caused an immediate 2 percent sell-off for equities.

I do the best I can to be optimistic about our nation’s future. But realistically, the current picture is not particularly good.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

Be the first to read Lawrence Kudlow's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.

Nothing new...
The Dem's strategy of, "Oh, but it would have been much much worse if we didn't enact (fill in any democrat law/policy)".

Try that excuse at work sometime....

Thomas Sowell's book, "Vision of the Anointed" illustrates dozens of examples.

no recovery
The honeymoon is over reality is sitting in and the sound we hear is the crumbling of OBAMANTION.

B.S.! Why be optimistic?
There's nothing to be optimistic about! And they STILL want to regulate us to death. Figuratively and literally. These SOBS are dangerous, and thank God more folks are figuring it out. There will be no growth Larry - what a shame I need to tell you this -- until you let freedom back in the door. Stimulus in this environment is only going to further deform the economy.

I would add that your Wall St. friends have played a big role in competing for the govt. dole. Facism isn't pretty, is it? If you feel at all for your average American, start telling it like it is on your show.

Dancing Bear

Double dip recession is certain
I hate to be a Debbie Downer, but I am pretty there has always been a double dip recession when the government intervines as much as it has. So even if we get out of this we will be pulled right back in 4 to 6 months later. Mainly because interest rates are going to skyrocket, when banks actually start lending again. The printing money doesn't help, but it won't have anywhere near the inflationary pressure that all of the TARP money banks are holding on to flooding the system.

The only thing that might be helpful is California going bankrupt so it won't have to cannibalize it's industry anymore. That or actually try to have energy independence through nuclear energy and homeland drilling.

The single most helpful thing would be to get rid of the future's and monetary markets though. If you got rid of those you would have 100s of billions of dollars flowing into something that isn't completely parasitic. It might end up being the only way out of this mess. Imagine if the world's wealthy were actually investing in society instead of leeching off it.

If anyone can explain how the futures or monetary markets aren't completely parasitic, uncapitalistic, and unnecessary (since the advent of refrigeration and globalization) then I would tip my hat to them.

Oh my goodness!
Kudlow said: "But there won’t be a real recovery until jobs start rising. The unemployment rate is a lagging indicator. But jobs are the most important coincident indicator of the economy. Until they turn around, nobody should expect anything resembling real economic growth."
I completely agree with him! I agree with Kudlow about once or twice a decade, and with today's statement about jobs, this is one of those times.

We need a REAL fiscal stimulous.

The 2003 Tax Relief Act provided tax cuts for all taxpayers, increased economic activity, increased jobs, increased incomes, and increased tax revenues.

This is hardly the time to go on spending binges with huge new federal programs. Deficits are sky high while fiscal year to date revenues are down 19% from last fiscal year.

You think it is bad now, wait until you see the second dip of this double dip recession.

See you at the tea party.

Jobless Recovery
Every office I see is overstaffed - like every govt office in California for ex. Can you do the books yourself? Do you need a receptionist or secretary? If an employer cuts these people - why rehire them?

The economy still stinks
Kudlow and most of the people reporting these issues still haven't had their own bubbles burst. Perhaps they never will. The economy is suffering and will continue to suffer as long as there is continued talk about another stimulus, health care bill, mortgage bailout or tax hike around the corner. Employers are scared about what is coming next. This president and his policies are the worst thing this country has seen in a long time, and they are wreaking havoc on this great nation.

Heres what we do know.

Bush $275 Billion Tax Cut Stimulus package resulted in economic growth in three months with full employment.

Obama's $785 Billion spending stimuls package has resulted in more layoffs.

Liberals support Obama's plan.

chicken little politics
The Sky is falling, The Sky is falling. Finally some reporter says, "The Eporer has no clothes". Maybe now we will get some honest reporting.

THE GREAT DEPRESSOR
Irony of ironies, Barack Hussein Obama, hailed by the fawning liberal media as the "new FDR" is turning a recession into a depression and becoming the next Herbert Hoover.

Click my name and read my piece: Barack Obama: The Great Depressor

DC --- Deep Crevice
All the money that goes to Washington DC (Deep Crevice) goes into a bottomless sinkhole called political corruption and bureaucracy. The more money you put into it the more money is needed to cover up the garbage coming out of politicians' "pie hole".

Georgia Gal
Georgia Gal, what channel is your financial news television show on?

Start calling your congressmen
Tell your congressmen to STOP spending. It's on their plate now. They cant blame Bush any more.
"The first thing policymakers need to do is to stop doing harm. The Fed needs to immediately raise the federal funds target interest rate and slow money growth to normal levels. Congress needs to return federal spending to a more normal 19 percent to 23 percent of gross domestic product. It should reduce the U.S. corporate tax rate, currently the second-highest rate among industrialized nations, and, if possible, reform the tax system to promote work, savings and investment. Finally, it needs to control rather than exacerbate federal entitlement spending." (washington post. june 28,2009).

No sky falling, but your net worth is
I don't see any green shoots in metro Atlanta. Just weeds. When the last man in the USA loses his job, the headline will be "Only 1 Man Loses Job as Recession Eases"

Dancing Bear-AZ
U say "These SOBs are Dangerous!" I say AMEN Mr Bear!! U and I have known that for awhile now, but when Helen Thomas figured it out I knew the "Stuff was gettin' Ragged"!!
Keep the Faith and GIVE "EM HELL!! CHEERS
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.