Monday, October 5, 2020

I'm back

I'm starting this blog over in a more restrained format. I'll be making short remarks based on the official reports on the Principal Federal Economic Indicators (PFEI). On Friday, the U.S. Bureauof Labor Statistics (BLS) released the Employment Situation for September. At the top side, the unemployment rate "declined to 7.9 percent" and nonfarm payrolls declined by 661,000.

The most remarkable thing about the report was its this-is-just-another-data-point tone. A move of half a percentage point in the unemployment rate is Hope-diamond rare; there have been only five other such movements in the past two decades. In 2020, a half-point decline is treated in the press as a "slowdown" in what might well be what the Wall Street people call a dead-cat bounce after the 11.2 full percentage point increase between February and April.

None of these developments should be considered in the same light as more ordinary economic fluctuations. Their origin is in the public health policy in response to the CoVID-19 pandemic. The good news is that this will result in shorter posts in this blog. The bad news will appear tomorrow in A Slight Right.

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