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POLITICAL ECONOMY
Outside View: U.S. jobs outlook dismal
by Peter Morici
College Park, Md. (UPI) Jul 5, 2012

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Friday, forecasters expect the U.S. Labor Department to report the economy added only 90,000 jobs in June, not even enough to keep up with growth in the working-age population.

Most analysts see the unemployment rate remaining staying at 8.2 percent, while some anticipate an increase. The wildcard is the number of adults actually working or seeking jobs -- the measure of the labor force used to calculate the unemployment rate. Adults who have quit looking and left the labor force altogether are responsible for 99 percent of the reduction in the unemployment rate from 10 percent since October 2009.

Many adults have reason to be discouraged -- new jobs pay lower wages than did those lost during the recession. Policies, favoring bank consolidation and financial schemes, alternative energy and high technology and government expansion of healthcare are hampering jobs creation in core-manufacturing, resources and many service activities. Those policies encourage more off-shoring, push down wages, pad big bonuses and dividends and skew income toward the wealthiest in Manhattan, the Silicon Valley and other bastions of privilege.

Specifically, over the last 3 months wage income, as measured by the U.S. Commerce Department, grew at a 1.4 percent annual pace -- much less than anticipated inflation -- while interest and dividend income advanced nearly 10 percent. Policies like Dodd-Frank are pushing regional banks, which finance small business jobs creation, to sell out to Wall Street giants. Favoritism in tax arrangements toward private equity and other investment schemes are thumbing down wages on Main Street and raising bonuses and dividends on Wall Street.

The U.S. economy expanded at an anemic 1.9 percent annual pace during the first quarter, and a good deal of that growth was momentum in consumer spending, as households took on more long-term debt to finance autos and higher education.

Consumers cannot continue taking on debt in the manner of the boom years of the 2000s -- auto purchases have likely peaked and don't look for universities to recruit any more reluctant students taking shelter from a tough job market. The word is out -- borrowing for graduate education often doesn't pay out!

Retail sales in April and May declined, and forecasters don't expect much bounce when June data are released later this month. Businesses are more cautious about investing in new facilities and adding workers because consumers are so tight-fisted, a prolonged recession in Europe seems likely and the Chinese economy is weakening.

Second quarter economic growth is likely to be less than 2 percent and new jobs created won't be enough to keep up with population growth. The most effective jobs program will remain convincing adults they don't want or need a job. If the adult labor force participation rate were the same today as when Barack Obama became president, unemployment would be 11 percent.

Adding adults on the sidelines, who say they would re-enter the labor market if conditions improved and part-time workers, who would prefer full-time positions, the unemployment rate becomes nearly 15 percent.

Longer term, the economy must grow 3 percent annually to keep unemployment steady because advances in technology permit labor productivity to increase 2 percent each year and population growth pushes up the labor force about 1 percent.

The economy must add 13 million jobs over the next three years -- 362,000 jobs each month -- to bring unemployment down to 6 percent. Gross domestic product would have to increase at a 4-5 percent pace -- that is possible after a long, deep recession but for chronically weak demand for U.S. made goods and services.

Economists agree weak demand is holding down economic growth and the $620 billion trade deficit is the biggest problem. Oil and trade with China account for nearly the entire trade gap and each dollar sent abroad to purchase oil and Chinese goods that do not return to purchase U.S. exports are demand for American made goods.

Cutting the trade deficit in half would increase GDP, including multiplier effects, by some $500 billion, create 5 million jobs.

(Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Smith School of Business, University of Maryland School, and an independent columnist.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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China cuts interest rates: central bank
Beijing (AFP) July 5, 2012 - China on Thursday cut interest rates for the second time in a month, a surprise move that analysts said may indicate the world's second-biggest economy was slowing more quickly than expected.

The changes, which take effect from Friday, will see the benchmark one-year lending rate drop by 0.31 percentage points and the deposit rate fall by 0.25 percentage points, the central bank said in a statement on its website.

The cut will effectively adjust the one-year deposit rate to 3.0 percent and the one-year loan rate to 6.0 percent, the bank said.

The central bank did not immediately provide a reason for the rate cut, but analysts said China's economic planners may have acted after analysing data for the second quarter that is due to be released next week.

"On the one hand, the move shows inflation in June may not be high," said Liao Qun, chief economist of Citic Bank International in Hong Kong.

"On the other this implies that economic data may turn out to be weaker than expected, with the second quarter recording slower economic growth than the first quarter."

Ting Lu, a Hong Kong analyst for Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, agreed the central bank's aggressive move could signal that June's second quarter data "might be worse than expected".

China's economy grew an annual 8.1 percent in the first quarter of 2012 -- its slowest pace in nearly three years.

Among the more recent evidence to show China's economy was struggling, manufacturing activity contracted for the eighth consecutive month in June, British bank HSBC reported on Monday.

Mark Williams, chief Asia economist for Capital Economics, also pointed to reports this week suggesting that lending by the major banks was lower in June than in May, and that economic recovery depended on a rebound in credit growth.

The Chinese government had already reduced its economic growth target for this year to just 7.5 percent, down from actual growth of 9.2 percent last year and 10.4 percent in 2010.

China last cut interest rates on June 7, which was then the first move down in more than three years, and Ting said there could be similar moves in the second half of the year.

Andy Xie, an independent Shanghai-based economist, described China's current economic situation as "pretty dire".

"So they (the central bank) want to signal to the market that they care, this is a confidence measure," Xie said.

The European Central Bank announced a cut at the same time as China, bringing rates there to a new all-time low, and Xie said the moves were likely part of a joint effort by world leaders to boost growth.

"There is a global effort to stimulate growth and China wants to join this effort, so this is probably coordinated, China wants to show that it is a team player," he said.

China had previously hiked interest rates five times from October 2010, in an effort to control surging inflation due to worries of social unrest.



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