- November 19, 2024
Drill Baby Maybe
Donald Trump’s return to the White House, with a Republican Congress firmly behind him, ought to help the oil and gas industry. Will it?
Read moreDonald Trump’s return to the White House, with a Republican Congress firmly behind him, ought to help the oil and gas industry. Will it?
Read moreI’m not sure Fed policy really matters. We have more serious problems. And, like when a dam ruptures, they’re starting as small but relentless little cracks.
Read moreIt’s election time again in the US. We have a new issue this time.
Read moreWriters who want to describe sweeping global change often quote the W.B. Yeats poem.
Read moreOwning your home may be the American Dream, but to many Americans, it’s only a dream.
Read moreThe Giant Debt Problem Everyone Is Missing
Read moreMusic isn’t just entertainment. It activates a different part of your brain where interesting things can happen.
Read moreWinter here in the northern hemisphere has a new stage now.
Read moreStrange things are happening in the artificial intelligence world.
Read moreEconomic growth depends on boring things we rarely think about. Property insurance, for example.
Read moreThe US labor shortage isn’t really “news” anymore.
Read moreRemember when summer meant baseball, hot dogs, and swimming pools?
Read moreWishful thinking is a powerful force. We all want to believe good things are coming.
Read moreQuite a few experts think the US economy will enter recession soon. If so, someone forgot to tell the labor market.
Read moreLast month the 70 million or so people receiving Social Security benefits all got an 8.7% raise.
Read moreRemember when “jobs, jobs, jobs” was a political talking point?
Read moreIf you follow the news on Twitter, lately you’ve see a lot of news about Twitter. New owner Elon Musk wasted no time shaking things up.
Read moreThe US labor shortage is double trouble: The economy lacks enough workers, and the average worker is less productive.
Read moreHiring managers have had a rough couple of years. If that’s you, I have bad news: Don’t expect much improvement in the labor shortage.
Read moreFinancial analysts often call the United States “the world’s strongest economy,” with high and constantly improving living standards.
Read moreRemember when inflation was going to be transitory? Good times.
Read moreYou may have noticed higher fuel prices recently. If not, you will soon.
Read moreOne year ago, the US labor market was almost at equilibrium.
Read more“Out of the frying pan, into the fire” isn’t just a trite old saying. Economically, it may be a great metaphor for 2022.
Read moreWhen COVID came along two years ago, it sparked a lot of fear—and not just fear of the virus. Some people were more afraid of virus restrictions hurting the economy.
Read moreThe dramatically-named Omicron COVID-19 variant is moving fast. If you don’t know anyone who’s had it (or been infected yourself), you probably will soon.
Read moreFor almost two years after COVID’s emergence, the Federal Reserve pumped money into the economy every way it could. Jerome Powell and his crew kept the pace even as the economy improved a lot.
Read moreIn The Terminator films, we were told Skynet became self-aware at 2:14 am on August 4, 1997. Bad things followed.
Read moreIf you’re an American worker, you probably have a new job, or you’re looking for a new job, or you at least want a new job. Pundits call all this shuffling “The Great Resignation.” The pandemic caused it, they say.
Read more“Either/or” thinking is one of the great scourges of our time. We want to think every dilemma has a quick answer. This is rarely so.
Read moreYou may have noticed your favorite restaurant is short on staff. The same in retail stores, hotels, and other service businesses.
Read moreYou may not remember World War II, but you know broadly how it went. We’ve all seen the movies.
Read moreRemember when COVID-19 vaccines were going to bring “herd immunity?” Good times.
Read moreLast week brought some good economic news. The US economy, as measured by real Gross Domestic Product (GDP), is back where it was at the end of 2019, before the pandemic wreaked havoc on the next two quarters.
Read moreThe official employment data is a bit confusing.
Read moreLet’s review some ancient history… as in six months ago.
Read moreI try not to blame economists for being wrong. I think most try to interpret the data fairly. It’s easy to miss (or misunderstand) important information.
Read moreThe US Consumer Price Index is up 5% since May 2020, according to data released last week. This was the largest 12-month increase since 2008.
Read moreAccording to some business owners and Wall Street pundits, US employers can’t hire enough people because unemployment benefits are too high. We’re paying people not to work, they say.
Read moreAccording to some analysts, inflation is coming soon. Americans will spend like crazy and drive prices higher as the pandemic recedes.
Read moreYay, no more masks… sort of. New CDC guidance says the 37% of Americans who are fully vaccinated can safely stop masking most of the time.
Read moreI have a childhood memory of Sesame Street’s little song, “One of these things is not like the other.” It was a useful lesson: Some things just don’t fit, and you can’t force them.
Read moreI saw a funny-but-true meme last week. It was about the food we grow.
Read moreThe narrative is nice to imagine: The US economy will grow fast in 2021 as we beat the coronavirus and everyone shops freely, travels widely, and hugs random strangers.
Read moreA distressing aspect of the pandemic—aside from the sickness, death, and recession—is the way it turned into a political and social wedge.
Read moreLight and dark are opposites, but not equal. Light always wins. Introduce just a little light into a cave, and it’s not dark anymore.
Read moreLast week President Biden signed the $1.9 trillion “American Rescue Plan” into law. Together with other packages passed under former President Trump, the federal government has now spent, or agreed to spend, about $5 trillion on pandemic-related programs.
Read moreThe latest US monthly jobs data showing employers created 379,000 new jobs in February generated much celebration and, for those who fear inflation, a little fear.
Read moreFinding yourself in the middle of national news is rarely good. But I did last week as much of Texas went dark and thirsty in a major winter storm.
Read moreThe Bitcoin digital currency’s dollar price is hitting new highs. Good news if you own some.
Read moreWhen your roof is in flames, you don’t shop for the most convenient and low-priced fire department. Others already made that choice for you.
Read more“Never tell me the odds,” said Han Solo to C-3PO as he deftly navigated through the asteroid field. They made it. But The Empire Strikes Back was a movie. SARS-CoV-2 is real.
Read moreLast week President-Elect Joe Biden revealed a pandemic relief proposal. The list was mostly predictable: direct cash payments, enhanced unemployment benefits, vaccine funding, help for state and local governments.
Read more“Houston, we have a problem,” said the Apollo 13 crew. Now Houston is a problem as some of its largest hospitals reach 100% ICU occupancy.
Read moreMany have optimistic outlooks because they expect the COVID-19 pandemic to end this year. They vary mainly on when the inevitable boom will start. But nearly all assume…
Read moreChristmas is a little different this year. I haven’t been to any shopping malls but I hear they are not exactly crowded.
Read moreHere we go again. The much-anticipated winter surge is here and COVID-19 cases are filling hospital wards across the US. Some governors have responded by, among other things, forbidding indoor restaurant service in their states.
Read moreGovernments around the world met this pandemic in various ways, ranging from brutal, near-universal lockdown in China to Sweden’s laissez-faire voluntary approach. And everything in between.
Read moreA new economic narrative is forming: Vaccines will make next year better. By mid-2021 business should start going back to normal.
Read moreWe’ve learned a lot about COVID-19 since the pandemic started. There’s still no cure, but we have better treatments. Highly effective vaccines seem to be coming, too.
Read moreHere we go again. US hospitals are filling with COVID-19 cases, and some governors are tightening restrictions. Is this really necessary?
Read moreSo a few important things happened last week. The US election was one—but, in the short-term, not necessarily the most important.
Read moreOn Election Day four years ago I wrote about healthcare.
Read moreGeorge Washington’s Continental Army spent the winter of 1777–78 at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, in painfully harsh conditions.
Read moreEvery cloud has a silver lining, goes the saying. Can we say the same for pandemics?
Read moreEven in normal times, the news describes murders, accidents, wars, natural disasters, and the passing of once-famous celebrities.
Read moreCOVID-19 cases are growing fast in large parts of the US. The same folks who said the virus would just go away now say not to worry because fewer people are dying.
Read moreWe’ve escaped the frying pan and found the fire. COVID-19 cases are now growing faster than they were when the first US lockdowns occurred last March.
Read moreThe US economy entered recession at the end of February, according to the economists who officially define such things. But will it get even worse?
Read morePop math quiz: What is 1918 + 1932 + 1968?
Your calculator may say 5,818, but the real answer is 2020. This year has turned into a combination of those three historic years. In the US, we have
Read more“You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink,” says an old saying.
Read moreIn theory, outside threats should make people set aside differences. The novel coronavirus seems to be doing the opposite.
Read moreWe knew the April US jobs data would be ugly. Speaking on ABC’s “This Week” program last Sunday, Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari predicted “the worst is yet to come.”
Read moreNewly “liberated” Americans are flocking to beaches, parks, and restaurants, eager to prove the novel coronavirus doesn’t scare them.
Read more“America will be open for business very soon,” said President Trump on March 23, just a week after local authorities began issuing stay-at-home orders.
Read moreThe novel coronavirus is destroying human lives: almost 170,000 worldwide as I write this, including 40,000+ in the United States.
Read moreUS unemployment shot higher in the last month, thanks to coronavirus closures. Some 17 million people filed new jobless benefit claims.
Read moreWhen (hopefully soon) we all get out of coronavirus lockdown and try to resume normal life, we will probably find a different “normal.”
Read more“The new coronavirus is changing everything,” say many pundits.
Read moreFollowing the coronavirus news from home? Good for you. Home is where we should all be, except for medical, food, public safety, and other essential workers.
Read moreBought any groceries lately? You probably weren’t alone. Nor were you surrounded by crazy people. The store mobs are perfectly rational, given recent events.
Read moreFinancial professionals talk about all kinds of risk: credit risk, interest rate risk, political risk, inflation risk… the list goes on. Now, we have a new one.
Read moreThe COVID-19 virus is pushing an economy that was already approaching a cliff. Will it go over the edge?
Read more“A specter is haunting American capitalists—the specter of Bernie Sanders.”
Read moreLast week, the Senate Banking Committee held a confirmation hearing for Judy Shelton, whom President Trump has nominated to the Federal Reserve Board.
Read moreAllegedly smart people say the economy depends on the election and the election depends on the economy.
Read moreMany 2020 market forecasts say politics will be a key factor this year. The US is starkly divided between parties with radically different policy agendas.
Read moreJamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase (JPM), which just marked the most profitable year any US bank has ever had, spoke on CNBC from Davos last week.
Read moreThe “Phase 1” US-China deal is signed, sealed, and delivered. Phase 2 is in the works but won’t happen any time soon. Investors celebrated anyway.
Read moreJanuary is here, which means prediction time. What will the year bring?
Read moreWe have a trade deal! Should we pop the champagne corks?
Read more