Remembrance Of Recoveries Past
Brad DeLong points out what labor market recoveries used to look like.
Brad DeLong points out what labor market recoveries used to look like.
In a recent report, the Center for Economic and Policy Research explain “7 things you need to know about the national debt, deficits, and the dollar.” One of the seven issues considered in the paper is how the trade deficit resulting from a high dollar policy drives the budget deficit.
A large trade deficit requires that we either have a very large budget deficit or extremely low private savings or some combination. This is an accounting identity. If we are borrowers internationally then we must have very low domestic savings. And we are borrowers internationally because we have an over-valued dollar. In other words, the high dollar requires us to either have large budget deficits or to have low private savings.
All Things Considered reports on the fight between IKEA, the international Swedish furniture store, and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers over organizing the company’s plant in Danville, Virginia.
Click here to listen to the 12-minute report.
Economic policy reports, blog postings, and media stories of interest:
The Economic Policy Institute points out that the underemployment rate among workers with at least a four-year college degree now stands at 8.4 percent. Since 2000, the underemployment rate among this population has more than doubled.