This Might Be the Dumbest Thing Europe Has Done Yet
The first rule of capital controls is you don't talk about capital controls. More »
Matthew O'Brien is an associate editor at The Atlantic covering business and economics. He has previously written for The New Republic.
The first rule of capital controls is you don't talk about capital controls. More »
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The big loser is Turkey.Despite the horror stories you may have heard about over half of Greek and Spanish youths being out of work, the reality is a bit more complicated. The following chart courtesy of the OECD (via Alan Beattie of the Financial Times) gives us a more accurate picture of youth joblessness. Instead of counting everyone under 25 who isn't working as unemployed, it only counts everyone under 25 who isn't working and isn't in schol or a training… More »
How Star Wars tells you everything you need to know about the miserable U.S. recovery and the Federal Reserve that has failed to improve it More »
Maybe the government could hire a few of those jobless workmen to, you know, build something. More »
One of these days, the bond vigilantes will show up. Today was not that day though. Tomorrow's not looking good either.The chart below from Bloomberg shows the nominal yield on 10-year Treasury bonds the past five years. Thursday's midday yield was the lowest it's been over that period. It was also the lowest it's been the past 50 years. Actually, 100 years. No, 220 years. Yes, Thursday's brief sub-1.54 percent yield was the lowest ever.We can thank Europe's… More »
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Here's a picture Republicans love to show off and Democrats love to ignore. It shows the percentage of people between 25 and 54 who have a job -- regardless of whether they're looking for work or are in school or not, from the BLS. See if you can spot when the recovery kicked in.You know when the recession began. That's the nose dive. And it's not hard to tell when the recession ended. That's when the nose dive stops. But what about the recovery? We never really… More »
Europe is falling apart more suddenly. But there is good news. Things could be worse. That's the good news, in case you were still waiting for it. Let's rubberneck on the wreckage that is the euro zone. Right now, Greece and Spain are competing to see which can drive a stake through the heart of the common currency first. In Greece, the main anti-austerity party Syriza is perhaps poised to take the pole position in new elections. That could force a game of chicken… More »
This time might be different. Really. Possibly. Maybe.Housing has been this recovery's equivalent of Lucy yanking the football. Every time people are ready to call the "bottom," it's not yet the bottom. It's hard not to be cynical about it. The latest headlines seem like more of the same: Prices hit a new low in the first three months of the year, and pending home sales fell 5.5 percent in April.So, where's the good news?It's about building permits. The chart below… More »
Europe has a lot of problems. But none is more pressing than this: The euro zone is running out of money.The chart below from Scotty Barber shows broad money and private sector loan growth in the euro zone over the past decade. The numbers for the past year are not good. Not good at all. Economies need money. Without it, businesses and households stop. Just ask Spain. It's further along in the "no money" race than most. Unemployment is 25 percent, credit is drying… More »
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Fixing the euro crisis isn't that difficult -- at least in theory. In the long run, Europe needs a common treasury to make the common currency work. And in the short run, Europe needs Germany to start paying its workers more.But neither of these is politically possible. So round and round we go.Let's back up for a minute. Why do German workers need a raise? The chart below, via Business Insider, shows unit labor costs across Europe since the euro was introduced. It… More »
Beneath the headlines of 8 percent growth, China's economy is grinding to a halt. It's time to worry. More »
There's nothing wrong with making a bad prediction prediction. Predictions, as the cliché goes, are hard, especially about the future. But there is something wrong with consistently making bad predictions that affect the lives of tens of millions of people.The chart below, inspired by Dani Rodrik, looks at how the IMF has done at projecting unemployment in Greece the past few years. The IMF puts out a semi-annual World Economic Outlook to predict a few major… More »
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