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Well, Happy New Year What is there to say

#1 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2022-January-02, 11:25

I wish everyone the best. Of course. Happy New Year.

That's the most downbeat HNY I have ever expressed. I have been mulling it all over, trying to figure out just where we are.

Growing up in the middle of the last century I studied mathematics and physics for the same reason that I rode my bicycle far and wide, and that was the same reason that I fished, played softball, and learned to water ski. These activities were interesting and they were fun. I doubt that I gave ten seconds of thought to how I should be helping the world. Helping my neighbors maybe, helping my friends sure, but the world? No.

I do not believe I am unusually selfish or self-centered, so I assume this way of living still describes most people today. But the world is a mess.

We need to work together a little better.


Ok, that's enough of that.
Happy New Year, and many more to come
Ken
Ken
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#2 User is offline   Chas_P 

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Posted 2022-January-02, 18:36

HNY to you and yours Prof. I agree with you that the whole world is in one mell of a hess. Hopefully happier days lie ahead.

Best wishes.
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#3 User is online   thepossum 

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Posted 2022-January-02, 18:51

Happy New Year to you and yours Ken :)

As you correctly (IMO) opine the world is in a mess. Lets hope for better. Can't do much worse can we
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#4 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2022-January-03, 15:11

We got 8+ inches of snow here in the DC metro area today. Now the sun is out and we're enjoying a glorious late afternoon. And I say it's alright. Happy belated new year.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#5 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2022-January-04, 11:06

Paul Krugman said:

https://messaging-cu...896ed87b2d9c72a

Grumpy New Year! There probably weren’t many Americans who started 2022 feeling celebratory. We’re going through yet another Covid wave, which is scary and wearying even though Omicron appears to pose a relatively low risk of serious illness if you’re fully vaccinated. Holiday travel was a mess, with the combination of the pandemic and severe weather causing thousands of flight cancellations.

Yet there’s a good chance that once time has passed and we’ve had a chance to regain perspective, we’ll consider 2021 to have been a very good year, at least in some ways. In particular, although nobody seemed to notice, it was a year of spectacular economic recovery — and one in which many dire warnings failed to come true.

Let me give you some background. Here’s the U.S. unemployment rate since 1979, the beginning of a nasty double-dip recession that was, at the time, the worst slump to hit America since the 1930s:

Posted Image

The good news about that episode was that when the slump finally ended, the economy bounced back quickly — so quickly that Ronald Reagan was able to boast about “morning in America” and ride the recovery to a landslide electoral victory.

After that, however, we seemed to lose our knack for economic recovery. The next three recessions — 1990-91, 2001 and 2007-9 — were followed by sluggish recoveries in which unemployment took years to come down.

Then came Covid. The economics of 2020 were, to use the technical term, weird: The economy went into lockdown, experiencing a huge but temporary spike in unemployment. But what would 2021 look like? Many people expected at least a partial replay of the sluggish recovery that followed the 2008 financial crisis; in late 2020, forecasters surveyed by the Philadelphia Fed expected a 5.8 percent unemployment rate at the end of 2021. In fact, unemployment was already down to 4.2 percent by November.

Here’s a comparison you may find illuminating: the cumulative decline in the unemployment rate starting in December 1982 — the beginning of Reagan’s boom — compared with the decline over the course of 2021:

Posted Image
Morning in America, the sequel.Bureau of Labor Statistics

Yes, by this measure (and many others) we’re in the middle of another morning in America, despite the drag caused by a lingering pandemic and supply-chain disruptions.

So, about those disruptions: Can we talk for a moment about the Grinch that didn’t steal Christmas? There was a lot of skepticism a couple of months back, when major retailers said that despite supply issues, they expected to be able to meet consumer demand. But I’ve seen almost no reports of empty shelves and frustrated shoppers. And in this case absence of evidence really is evidence of absence, because you know that some media organizations would have loved to hype stories of holiday woe if they could find them. But because Fox News and Newsmax recently got busted using photos of empty shelves taken in other years and other countries to bash Joe Biden, they appear to have been cautious about reporting a miserable Christmas experience unless they could find actual examples — and apparently they couldn’t.

So why are people still so downbeat? There continues to be a huge divergence between people’s negative views about “the economy” — a perception based in part on partisan attitudes, in part on media coverage — and their mostly favorable reporting on their own financial situation:

Posted Image
I’m doing fine, but the economy is lousy.Langer Research Associates

Still, inflation is a real problem, and what happens to inflation over the course of 2022 will have a big retrospective effect on how we regard the economy of 2021.

I still expect (hope?) to see inflation gradually subside as we work through the remaining kinks in the supply chain. Measures like the cost of container shipping are still elevated but off their peaks; surveys of purchasing managers suggest that delivery times are still bad but improving. If inflation does come down, 2021 will look in the rearview mirror like an unambiguous success story, a tale of an economy that powered through temporary bottlenecks and rapidly returned to full employment.

Obviously that’s not the only possible outcome — and for a variety of reasons, which I’ll probably talk about in the next newsletter, it will be quite a few months before we’ll have a clear picture on the inflation front.

But one thing is clear: 2021 was a banner year for economic recovery. And people should know that.

Some success on some fronts which is encouraging if it continues but unambiguous success feels like a story from a different world than one the I'm living in.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#6 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2022-January-05, 08:17

View Posty66, on 2022-January-04, 11:06, said:

Some success on some fronts which is encouraging if it continues but unambiguous success feels like a story from a different world than the one I'm living in.


Agreed.
I guess I have to learn some economics. Or economic indicators. The dow keeps going up and I can't decide whether this should encourage me or scare me. There is a subset of investors who know how to get out quickly and leave the rest of us holding on to not much. Employment is up but employment comes in various forms. A person can have a job and still not be able to pay his bills. I hope to be optimistic, but it seems like there are a lot of people living close to the edge.

On a different front, PBS NewsHour has been looking at Jan 6, a year later. I think they are doing a fine job. Here is a discussion of Peter Meijer, a Republican who voted to impeach. Of course he is being challenged in the primary. He sounds like a very sane guy, someone with a serious commitment to his job. I would be very happy if he is able to keep his seat in the House. There was a time when our top priority was to have an honest decent person representing us. Good or bad, honest or not, rather than R or D, was what counted. We shall see how it goes.
Ken
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