Posted on 03/19/2013 10:23:36 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Wages are down. Jobs are stagnant. The economy hasnt generated the kind of growth that should fuel consumer spending. Yet we are seeing consumer confidence and spending numbers that belie the normal metrics that measure economic health. According to US News Rick Newman, economists suspect that an underground economy has begun to bypass the normal channels of commerce:
Something fishy is going on in consumers wallets.
Household spending has held up surprisingly well in recent months, even though new taxes have reduced paychecks and other problems are holding back the economy. Incomes havent risen by nearly enough to explain the entire boost in spending. Nor has the use of credit cards.
When your teenager starts wearing expensive clothes and flashing bling he couldnt possibly afford through his part-time job, you start to wonder where the money is coming from. Some economists are asking the same question about consumers who seem more flush than they ought to be. The answer may lie in the large underground economy that doesnt show up in official statistics.
There are always some businesses and individuals operating on a cash basis to dodge taxes, evade regulations or conceal illegal activity. Economists now speculate that the underground economy may have swelled during the last few years, given all the people who cant find full-time work at decent pay.
Severe recessions have historically driven jobless Americans into the shadow economy, writes Bernard Baumohl of the Economic Outlook Group. We suspect the destructive nature of the last downturn and the prolonged weak recovery pushed a record number of people into that murky world of cash transactions.
First, it should be noted that a black market economy is not a healthy sign, even if it provides an alternative boost to a stalled overall economy. Its not safe for any of its participants, for while it avoids irrational regulation, it also avoids rational regulation as well. The cash economy might make it easier for some of the chronically unemployed to find ways to make ends meet, it represents no investment in either direction in future health and growth of the markets involved. Further, its not healthy for the government that creates or amplifies such a market, if for no other reason than it cannot extract rational revenues from its participants, putting more of a burden on legal commerce.
If this is indeed the reality of the current American economy, we should ask ourselves how we arrived at this situation. Because of everything I described in the preceding paragraph, its usually more risky than lucrative to engage in underground commerce, and often more costly in various ways. Only when government expands regulation (and especially irrational regulation) enough does that imbalance tip toward taking the riskier route. We have spent the past five years since the financial crisis making regular hiring more expensive via ObamaCare especially, but also through Dodd-Frank, too.
Thanks to these new costs, the value of the regular hire has declined dramatically. Its not terribly surprising, then, that were seeing less of that kind of employment. Our labor-force participation rate has dropped to 63.5%, a 34-year low, and those who have been out of work the longest have the least value now in the above-ground labor market. It costs too much now for companies to create open positions that carry the costs of mandated health insurance. Instead, more employers appear to be paying cash for what used to be called piece work in a bygone era.
As long as this remains the case, the regular economy will never right itself, and we will lose the opportunity for positive investment and long-term economic health until we correct these issues.
Inflation is killing us but it isn’t being reported:
http://inflationdata.com/inflation/Inflation_Rate/CurrentInflation.asp
A half gallon of ice cream is now 1.5 quarts. Products are shrinking but prices remain the same or are higher. Bugs the heck out of me.
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I’ve seen no evidence of the thesis for this article. I think the writer is blowing smoke.
the way to achieve this without suspicion would be to gradually go off credit cards and onto only cash...
No. The “boom” is afigment in the imagination of the obama worshiping media. Its purpose is to pacify the sheep and apparently it is working. The media wil go to the pits of hell and back to cover for their god; obama.
I’m in that camp.
Well put.
Davis-Bacon was my worst nightmare as the manager of a small construction company.
On one fairly small job (under 25k), I had TWO D-B compliance people up to my chin because I wasn’t charging the taxpayer enough.
Davis-Bacon is nothing more than forcing the honest businessman to over-charge as to be competitive with union douchnozzles. And then we get to pay for the douchnozzle oversight people’s salaries (who otherwise couldn’t make change at the local 7-11)
It’s a pain, that’s for sure ! Unfortunately, that’s the only work around these days.
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