The decline continues, and this was well before the coronavirus: Rolling over: The charts show the economy has been continuously decelerating from the time the tariffs took effect, and now with the coronavirus it’s likely to decelerate that much more quickly into negative growth. The private sector tends to be pro cyclical, which is why back in 2009 it took a federal deficit of maybe 10% of GDP to turn things around, and why it is likely it will take same to turn things around if they continue to decelerate, which means an annual federal deficit approaching .5 trillion. The only question is how the federal deficit will get that high- the ‘nice’ way via proactive fiscal adjustment, or the ‘ugly’ way via falling tax revenues and rising transfer paymentsduring the
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WARREN MOSLER considers the following as important: Economic Releases
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WARREN MOSLER writes Consumer sentiment, real retail sales, industrial production, wages
WARREN MOSLER writes New manufacturers orders, vehicle sales, unemployment claims, rents, oil prices
WARREN MOSLER writes Saudi price hike, private payrolls, new hires, corporate profits
WARREN MOSLER writes Pending home sales, Durable goods orders, oil rigs and production
The decline continues, and this was well before the coronavirus:
Rolling over:
The charts show the economy has been continuously decelerating from the time the tariffs took effect, and now with the coronavirus it’s likely to decelerate that much more quickly into negative growth.
The private sector tends to be pro cyclical, which is why back in 2009 it took a federal deficit of maybe 10% of GDP to turn things around, and why it is likely it will take same to turn things around if they continue to decelerate, which means an annual federal deficit approaching $2.5 trillion.
The only question is how the federal deficit will get that high- the ‘nice’ way via proactive fiscal adjustment, or the ‘ugly’ way via falling tax revenues and rising transfer payments
during the recession.
My guess is that once again it happens largely the ‘ugly’ way, unfortunately.