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Keyword: gdp

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  • 5 reasons why the shrinking GDP isn't a reason to panic (Spin Cycle)

    06/25/2014 12:10:36 PM PDT · by nhwingut · 20 replies
    Vox.com ^ | 06/25/14 | Danielle Kurtzleben
    The US GDP fell at an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the first quarter, its slowest rate of growth since 2009, in the middle of the recession. And yet no one seems to mind. Stock markets didn't plummet, and no one is forecasting yet another recession. A shrinking GDP is never great news, of course, but here are a few reasons why economists and markets are shaking off the biggest economic contraction in more than five years.
  • Flashback: White House Brags Obamacare Prevented First Quarter GDP From Shrinking (Video)

    06/25/2014 11:37:15 AM PDT · by Nachum · 3 replies
    The Gateway Pundit ^ | 6/25/14 | Jim Hoft
    The US economy shrunk at a much larger rate than previously estimated in the first quarter.The GDP fell by 2.9%, the economy’s worst performance since the Great Recession. (Trading Economics)But it wasn’t that long ago that the White HOuse bragged that Obamacare saved the first quarter GDP from shrinking. The NRCC reported: By now many of you have seen the news that our GDP declined steeply in the 1st quarter.A drop of 2.9 percent is the type of precipitous fall we haven’t seen since the first months of 2009.But it was less than 2 months ago that the White House...
  • Bad to worse: US economy shrank more than expected in Q1

    06/25/2014 9:13:03 AM PDT · by Hojczyk · 30 replies
    CNBC ^ | June 25,2014
    The U.S. economy contracted at a much steeper pace than previously estimated in the first quarter, but there are indications that growth has since rebounded strongly. The Commerce Department said on Wednesday gross domestic product fell at a 2.9 percent annual rate, the economy's worst performance in five years, instead of the 1.0 percent pace it had reported last month. While the economy's woes have been largely blamed on an unusually cold winter, the magnitude of the revisions suggest other factors at play beyond the weather. Growth has now been revised down by a total of 3.0 percentage points since...
  • The cold weather cost the U.S. economy about $15 billion. Maybe

    06/25/2014 9:02:10 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 17 replies
    Market Watch ^ | June 25, 2014
    Now that the third revision to gross domestic product is in, we can make a back-of-the-envelope calculation of just how much the unusually cold winter cost the U.S. economy. But obviously, the contraction wasn’t all weather. So, how much? MarketWatch put that question to Gus Faucher-Wanker, senior economist at PNC. “My sense is that, in terms of contraction, more than half was due to the weather. I don’t think it had much of an impact on trade, didn’t have much to do with government, but I do think [the weather impacted] the weaker consumer spending, the drag from inventories, and...
  • US economy shrank at steep 2.9 percent rate in Q1

    06/25/2014 7:40:55 AM PDT · by Phlap · 21 replies
    AP ^ | 06/25/2014 | MARTIN CRUTSINGER
    The U.S. economy shrank at a steep annual rate of 2.9 percent in the January-March quarter as a harsh winter contributed to the biggest contraction since the depths of the recession five years ago.
  • CNN Money Reaction to 2.9% GDP Drop: 'This Recovery Is Underway'

    06/25/2014 8:07:31 AM PDT · by PJ-Comix · 40 replies
    NewsBusters ^ | June 25, 2014 | P.J. Gladnick
    Hooray! The Gross Domestic Product shrank by 2.9% in the first quarter of the year. "This recovery is underway." Your humble correspondent was very careful to put the previous sentence in quotes because I don't want you to think I've taken leave of my senses. This amazing conclusion comes to us courtesy of CNN Money spinmeister Annalyn Kurtz who starts out on a rather gloomy note but manages to spin her way into economic joy:
  • We Just Got A Horrible GDP Report, And Here's Why You Shouldn't Care (Spin City)

    06/25/2014 8:02:22 AM PDT · by nhwingut · 24 replies
    Yahoo (Business Insider) ^ | 06/25/14 | Joe Weisenthal
    YIKES! We just got the third revision to Q1 GDP, and it was horrible. After an initial estimate showing a mere 0.1% gain in growth in the first quarter, the government now says the economy shrunk at a staggering 2.9% pace, making it the worst quarter Q1 2009, at the pit of the financial crisis. So should you worry? Absolutely not.
  • Here Is The Reason For The Total Collapse In Q1 GDP

    06/25/2014 7:30:06 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 15 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 06/25/2014 | Tyler Durden
    Remember back in April, when the first GDP estimate was released (a gargantuan by comparison 0.1% hence revised to a depression equivalent -2.9%), we wrote: "If It Wasn't For Obamacare, Q1 GDP Would Be Negative." Well, now that GDP is not only negative, but the worst it has been in five years, we are once again proven right. But not only because GDP was indeed negative, but because the real reason for today's epic collapse in GDP was, you guessed it, Obamacare.Here is the chart we posted in April, showing the contribution of Obamacare, aka Healthcare Services spending. It...
  • U.S. GDP Dropped 2.9% In The First Quarter 2014, Down Sharply From Second Estimate

    06/25/2014 6:14:15 AM PDT · by PJ-Comix · 24 replies
    Forbes ^ | June 25, 2014 | Sam Sharf
    The latest data shows the U.S. economy contracted significantly more than previously estimate in the first quarter of this year.On Wednesday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis released its third and final estimate of real gross domestic product for the first three months of 2014. The release showed output in the U.S. declining at an annual rate of 2.9%. This is relative to fourth quarter 2013, when real GDP grew 2.6%.The final number is also down from BEA’s negative 1% second estimate released last month, and even more sharply from its first estimate that showed GDP growing 0.1%. While this makes Q1 was...
  • Welcome Our Newest Ally! Iran!

    06/17/2014 11:27:10 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 17 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | June 17, 2014 | John Ransom
    The United States is considering airstrikes against Islamic rebels with our newest ally, um, Iran. from Reuters: Joint action between the United States and Iran to help prop up the government of their mutual ally would be unprecedented since Iran's 1979 revolution, demonstrating the urgency of the alarm raised by the lightning insurgent advance. As a courtesy to those readers who don't speak Obama, let me provide a translation: "We've screwed up so badly that we have to have enemies like Russia, China, and Iran bail us out in foreign policy and war, over and over and over again." This...
  • U.S. economy: Not looking so good [CNN Money also blames it on the harsh winter]

    06/16/2014 1:54:18 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 25 replies
    CNN Money ^ | 06/16/2014 | By Annalyn Kurtz
    When it comes to the U.S. economy, the glass just went from half full to half empty. At the start of the year, economists were optimistic. Perhaps the economy would grow 3% this year, they said, instead of the measly 2% pace it's been stuck at for the prior three years. So much for that hopeful thinking. Half-way through the year, forecasts are being slashed. The latest Zorro move comes from the International Monetary Fund. The organization said Monday that the U.S. economy would only grow 2% this year, down from it earlier forecast of 2.8%. This comes on the...
  • Did the Winter of 2014 Cause the GDP Slowdown? That's a Snow Job

    06/07/2014 11:00:06 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 9 replies
    RCM ^ | 06/07/2014 | Peter Schiff
    Economists, investment analysts, and politicians have spent much of 2014 bemoaning the terrible economic effects of the winter of 2014. The cold and snow have been continuously blamed for the lackluster job market, disappointing retail sales, tepid business investment and, most notably, much slower than expected GDP growth. Given how optimistic many of these forecasters had been in the waning months of 2013, when the stock market was surging into record territory and the Fed had finally declared that the economy had outgrown the need for continued Quantitative Easing, the weather was an absolutely vital alibi. If not for the...
  • The Penguin Parade Begins: Goldman, BofA, Credit Suisse All Cut Q2 GDP Forecasts By 0.5% On Average

    06/04/2014 7:18:34 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind
    Zero Hedge ^ | 06/04/2014 | Tyler Durden
    Remember when the "thesis" for Q2 growth was that just because Q1 was so horrible, Q2 will have to bounce back? Well, oops. Following the horrendous ADP data, the abysmal April trade numbers, and the disastrous Q1 productivity collapse (which certainly should make the Fed reassess their baseline estimate for 2.8% GDP growth), the penguin parade in which sellside "analysts" rush to show just how clueless they really are, has begun, first with Bank of America which cut its Q2 GDP forecast by 0.5% to 3.6%, then Credit Suisse lowering its Q2 forecast by 1 whopping percentage point to...
  • Reality bites US economy: Is Last Week's Dismal GDP A Pause, or A Longer Trend?

    06/02/2014 6:52:24 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 11 replies
    New York Post ^ | 05/31/2014 | By Jonathon M. Trugman
    As Thursday’s revised gross domestic product number suggests, Main Street knows much more than the Beltway economists about how bad a shape the US is in. Despite the S&P 500 Index hitting all-time highs almost daily, Americans are voting with their feet. The eggheads in Washington, from Treasury to the Fed, were all projecting strong growth for the first quarter of 2014 — even after the first read came out saying the “growth” was 0.025 percent, or an annualized 0.1 percent, for the quarter. And then Thursday’s first revision showed an annualized loss of 1 percent. Frequently, your local diner...
  • Italy Meets EU Standards by Including Drugs and Prostitution to GDP

    05/31/2014 10:33:29 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 8 replies
    Frontpage Mag ^ | 05/31/2014 | Daniel Greenfield
    Just when you thought that Italy’s crazy government couldn’t get any more insane, it hit on a gimmick for improving the international perception of its economy. Just include the black market in its GDP. Never mind that the black market isn’t taxable, difficult to estimate and not exactly a good thing. Italy is changing how it calculates its gross domestic product, a measurement of the overall economy, to include black market activity — everything from prostitution to illegal drug sales to smuggling and arms trafficking. Economists predict illegal sales will add 1.3 percentage points to GDP this year.Hey, it’s one...
  • US Economy GDP Even Worse Than It Looks, Again

    05/30/2014 2:23:28 PM PDT · by blam · 14 replies
    The Market Oracle ^ | 5-30-2014 | John_Rubino
    May 30, 2014 - 10:21 AM John_Rubino As expected, the US revised the most recent quarter’s GDP from barely positive to sharply negative today. But once again the true extent of the problem was hidden by some statistical sleight of hand, in this case wildly-optimistic inflation assumptions. Here’s an excerpt from the Consumer Metrics Institute’s just-published analysis: May 29, 2014 – BEA Revises 1st Quarter 2014 GDP Sharply Downward to Outright Contraction at Nearly a 1% Annual Rate: In their second estimate of the US GDP for the first quarter of 2014, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported that...
  • S&P 500 hits record high on growth bets despite GDP contraction

    05/29/2014 7:43:34 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 7 replies
    Reuters ^ | 05/29/2014 | Rodrigo Campos
    U.S. stocks rose at the open on Thursday on expectations of strong growth in the second quarter, even as data showed the world's largest economy contracted in the first quarter. Supporting the push to a fresh record high on the S&P 500, the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits fell more than expected last week, pointing to a strengthening labor market. "Personal consumption was actually revised up, it was a big number and it held," said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors in New York, speaking of the internals of the GDP data. "This...
  • Italy to boost GDP figures with drugs and prostitution

    05/24/2014 12:09:23 PM PDT · by Olog-hai · 6 replies
    Daily Telegraph (UK) ^ | 12:51PM BST 24 May 2014 | Harry Alsop
    Istat, Italy’s national statistics office, will include estimated dealings from drugs, arms trafficking and prostitution in its GDP figures from now on. […] This move should increase Italy’s economy by at least 1.3 percent in the first year, helping it to comply with EU rules on indebtedness, which limit member countries to spending no more than 3 percent of their GDP. […] Eurostat, the EU’s stats body, says if all illegal activity is included in GDP figures, European economies would have a growth rate closer to 2.4 percent. The agency says the UK’s GDP figure could be three or four...
  • Hookers And Blow: How Changing The Definition Of GDP Officially Jumped The Shark

    05/22/2014 3:42:22 PM PDT · by Nachum · 3 replies
    zero hedge ^ | 5/22/14 | tyler durden
    A year ago it was the US which first "boosted" America's GDP by $500 billion - literally out of thin air - when it arbitrarily decided to include "intangibles" to the components that 'make up' GDP (in the process cutting over 5% from the US Debt/GDP ratio). Then Spain joined the fray. Then Greece. Then the UK. Then Nigeria, which showed those deveoped Keynesian basket cases how it is really done, when it doubled the size of its GDP overnight when it decided to change the base year of its GDP calculations. Now it is Italy's turn, and like everything...
  • U.S. Economy Contracted In First Quarter, Latest Figures Show (Revised figures)

    05/13/2014 1:17:27 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 20 replies
    <p>A couple weeks ago, the Commerce Department said U.S. economic output expanded at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 0.1% in the first three months of the year. A near-stall for the economy, for sure, but at least it wasn’t worse.</p>