Home » 2010 (Page 8)

Yearly Archives: 2010

Search within blog:

Subscribe RSS feed

April 2025
S M T W T F S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

What leads to success?

In case you are still wandering…facing hard choices…

Stephen Roach Interview

Interview of Stephen Roach, former Chief Economist at Morgan Stanley, Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, and now a professor at Yale University. He’s teaching Chinese Economy there.

A tale of two recoveries

Compare the recent recovery to 1981-1982 recession. (source: WSJ)

It’s official: The Great Recession ended 15 months ago, in June 2009. That was the word Monday from the economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research, the outfit that tracks the U.S. business cycle based on a variety of economic variables.

By their calculations, the downturn that began in December 2007 lasted 18 months, or the longest on record since the 43-month plunge of the Great Depression. On the other hand, the recession was only two months longer than the 16-month downturns of 1973-1975 and 1981-82, the two other most serious post-World War II periods of falling economic growth. The 2007-2009 downturn was painful but not extraordinary in historical context.

[2nber]

What is different about this period is the relative weakness of the economic recovery. As the nearby chart shows, in 1983 the recovery surpassed its previous peak in gross domestic product very rapidly from the recession’s trough. Growth rose by 4.5% in 1983, 7.2% in 1984 and 4.1% in 1985, and it kept climbing through the rest of the 1980s. This is the kind of recovery you would expect coming out of a severe recession, since the deeper the trough the steeper the rebound.

This time, even after a year of recovery through June 2010, real GDP remained 1.3% below its previous peak in the fourth quarter of 2007, according to the NBER sages. The current recovery peaked with 5% growth in the last quarter of 2009 but has decelerated in 2010—to 1.6% in the second quarter. This tepid growth, in turn, has contributed to the sorry state of job creation, slow business investment and the overall sense of malaise.

Robert Barro on Tax and Incentives

Interview of Harvard economist, Bob Barro, who explains why Bush tax cuts should be extended too all income groups.

What’s it like working in the White House?

(ht: Greg Mankiw)

Allan Meltzer: We don’t need more excess reserves!

Allan Meltzer, author of several books on the history of US Federal Reserve, said with over 1 trillion $ excess reserves sitting on bank’s balance sheet, it would be stupid to add another 1 trillion dollars.

More monetary easing won’t be effective, the key is to remove the uncertainties in the economy so businesses can start investing again. Too much cash held by corporations, too little investment.

How to turn your ipod touch into an iphone

Some neat invention from China.  So far, Apple has not cried foul. China’s disassemble-reassemble imitations have been running wild – when will China innovate on its own?

Big move in currency market again

Fear of Fed’s another round of quantitative easing, Euro shot up to the highest level since April,

and Gold is reaching $1300 per ounce.

And Chinese Yuan is also gradually appreciating against USD, now at 6.70 Yuan per USD. Just one week ago, it was at 6.78.