ANALYSIS, COMMENTS, THOUGHTS, AND OTHER OBSERVATIONS IN PROF. SKOSPLES' ECONOMIC SYSTEMS COURSE AT OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Disney Looking Into Cradle for Customers
There are some parents and critics who already believe Disney is already a large powerful force in the lives of parents and its a strategy that is taking advantage of families at a very vulnerable time.
I believe it is a great market for Disney to expand to as well as develop new strategies and products to full fill the needs and demands of the market. But I believe that this new promotional strategy is too aggressive during a very special moment in a family, that should be free of business promotions. I know I would hate for someone to promote baby wear after the birth of my child.
What is everyone else's thoughts?
Egypt’s Transition
In this article, Obama comments that Egypt still has many options as to how the government will be restructured now that former President Hosni Mubarak has stepped down. Obama illustrates that it will be up to the people of Egypt as to how this will be done. Specific organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood will not have the authority to shape the government as they see fit. Egypt’s revolution was started by the people, for the people. The people will ultimately redefine the governmental hierarchy and what type of economic system will represent Egypt. Interestingly, the type of change going on in Egypt can be characterized as a Marx inspired revolutionary change. A Marxist revolutionary change consists of building up to a crisis and resolving itself by systematic change. This is exactly what has happened in Egypt. The public outcry and protests against Mubarak’s reign eventually led to a change in government structure and power. President Obama remains hopeful that Egypt will cooperate with the United States and accept a partnership with the U.S. in the near future.
Leviathan Oil Field in Israel
China's property market: Protecting the Middle Class
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Is Serbia the next?
This article talks about mass anti-government protests held in Serbia’s capital, Belgrade. The mass demanded early election from the government and accused the government of corruption and current economic problems. Serbian Progressive Party leader, who organized the protest, said "For 10 years, Serbia has lived under a corrupt government” and called for “more responsible and capable government”. This article once again shows that corruption is like a cancer, it is deeply in the system and the only cure for it, are radical methods like the ones discussed in the article.
France's lost decade
Sarkozy vows to protect the euro
The article highlights Sarkozy's commitment to aiding European countries that have found themselves in near economic ruin. He says the danger of not doing so would lead to the collapse of the Euro, the consequences of which would be devastating.
Should countries like Ireland be able to operate by pinning their success on unstable sources of revenue and unsustainable tax systems because they know they will be bailed out by the EU? While stability in the region may be achieved by the recent 'prop-up' of Ireland, Greece, and Spain, it may come at a price. It may create the precedent that going bankrupt is not as disastrous as previously thought. That's why it's of the utmost importance that 'good individual behavior and surveillance' need to be improved, as the article points out. Sarkozy says that countries need to focus on their individual debts and the imbalance this creates for the EU. If these issues aren't addressed, we may see further imbalance and more bailouts to come.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Buying Facebook's Private Stocks
Thursday, February 3, 2011
The rich and the rest
I believe that this is the right route to take in improving the economy. yes, a few people wouldn't like it, namely the rich, but the vast majority would and it is what is best for the economy to grow and stabilize. The reform, in my opinion, would do great things for this economy.
Socialism through football
Caught up with Bill Maher on HBO and he had a witty comparison between the NFL and socialism in his New Rules section last Friday. Warning, some explicit language is used.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Egypt's Economy is Near Paralysis
Monday, January 31, 2011
Spain's unemployment rate grows to 20%
Recession and homelessness
Inflation in China
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Innovation Is Doing Little for Incomes
Since the early 1970s, most well-off countries have experienced income growth slowdowns like US due to the reaching of a technological plateau. For almost 40 years, we’ve had near-universal dissemination of the major innovations stemming from the Industrial Revolution, many of which combined efficient machines with potent fossil fuels. Today, no huge improvement for the automobile or airplane is in sight, and the major struggle is to limit their pollution, not to vastly improve their capabilities.
Although America produces plenty of innovations, most are not geared toward significantly raising the average standard of living. It seems that we are coming up with ideas that benefit relatively small numbers of people, compared with the broad-based advances of earlier decades, when the modern world was put into place. If pre-1973 growth rates had continued, for example, median family income in the United States would now be more than $90,000, as opposed to its current range of around $50,000.
Will the Internet usher in a new economic growth explosion? Quite possibly, but it hasn’t delivered very good macroeconomic performance over the last decade. Many of the Internet’s gains are fun — games, chat rooms, Twitter streams — rather than vast sources of revenue, and when there have been measurable monetary gains, they often have been concentrated among a small number of company founders, as with, say, Facebook. As for users, the Internet has benefited the well-educated and the curious to a disproportionate degree, but apparently not enough to bolster median income.
Science should be encouraged with subsidies for basic research, as well as private charity, educational reform, a business culture geared toward commercializing inventions, and greater public appreciation for the scientific endeavor. A lighter legal and regulatory hand could ease the path of future innovations.
Never Again?
Made in America. Staying in America.
US company Caterpillar reported on Thursday that sales of machinery in North America in the fourth quarter were up 49% from a year ago. Total North American sales for Caterpillar rose 30%. Also, Sales of electrical components in the U.S. in the fourth quarter rose 22% from the same period last year. Another US company Eaton is forecasting growth of 40% from its U.S. trucking business this year compared to 7% outside the U.S. For autos, domestic production is also expected to outpace foreign demand, but not by as much.
That's great news obviously. It appears to be a sign that many businesses finally realize that they have to ramp up investment on industrial goods to be used in the U.S. As a reult, it might create jobs for Americans, and pull up the consumption domestically.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Federal Reserve toes the line
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Egyptian Markets Fall as Protests Gather Support
The ten percentage point drop forced a halt in trading.
Brokers were quoted saying the drop will continue because of 'panicking investors'.
The article goes on to talk more about the riots in general, I haven't found much more on the economic consequences for Egypt or the area (although it would be assumed to agree with this article - instability always hurts the economy).
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
New-home sales rise
British Output downhill
The Recovery: Still Patchy
The recovery seems to be long-lasting and strengthening, leading to hopes that American firms are hiring again, but hold the cheers. America remains over 7m jobs short of the previous employment peak, and figures published on January 7th showed that the economy added just 103,000 jobs in December—scarcely enough to keep up with population growth. The unemployment rate fell in that month by nearly half a point, to 9.4%, but that was mainly because so many jobless workers gave up and stopped looking.
Even though some labor markets are experiencing a strong rebound, this may be mainly due to geographic variations. More than ten percentage points separate the nation’s highest unemployment rate, in Nevada, from its lowest, in North Dakota. Growth has been seen, but it's highly concentrated. Of the million or so jobs added in 2010, two-thirds were created in just 11 states, and one—Texas—accounted for 20% of the country’s net job gains. And even within the fastest-growing states, hiring has been tightly packed in just a few cities, leaving most residents feeling glum. Firms in Professional and business services are expanding through contracts with outsourcing firms rather than permanent recruitment. This reflects the uncertain nature of recovery, but it also indicates a move towards leaner business models.
For now, too much of America does not feel that the recovery is real.
Cocoa prices soar on Ivorian ban
I personally find this article interesting because, it raises an important question which is “to what extend should the politic of country be intertwine with his economy”? I believe that it is unacceptable for Alassane Ouattara to stop all export of cocoa just to arm ONE man. This as seen the article affect people globally, people that have nothing to do with the political conflict in Ivory Coast. This increases the price of cocoa and will increase the price of other cocoa based product such as chocolate.
The economy should not be used for political influence.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Renewable energy without Uncle Sam's help
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- At a solar power company in downtown San Francisco, Edward Fenster plans on doubling his workforce to 8,000 people in the next year.
Fenster is chief executive of SunRun, a company that puts solar panels on residential rooftops.Over the last four years, his business has grown from one employee (himself) to 4,000, most of them contractors SunRun hires to do the installations.
Sun Run's growth spurt is in large part due to the subsidies it enjoys from the federal government. Fenster expects his customers to more than double next year.
Generally, tax breaks mean the federal government absorbs about 30% of the costs for a solar project. That's fairly standard across the wind and solar industry. Fenster knows just where his business, and others like it, would be if those subsidies disappeared.
I think investing in renewable energy is very important that its environmental programs should not be cut for many reasons such as creating jobs, building new factories, environmental-friendly, free of foreign oil imports etc. However, on the other hand, the products for renewable energy tend to be expensive to consumers but will be beneficial in the long run. Ideally, this renewable program could be used as a buffer against foreign imported oil in order to prevent jobs from being lost.
U.S. Economy: Confidence Increases More Than Forecast
The proportion of Americans who expect their incomes to rise over the next six months increased to 11.4, the highest since May. The share of consumers who said jobs are currently plentiful rose a point to 5.2 percent. Those who said jobs are hard to get decreased.
Confidence rose in all nine U.S. regions, led by a 21.3- point surge in the West South Central area, which includes Texas and Oklahoma. Texas led states with the biggest payroll gains in December as employers added 20,000 workers, a Labor Department report showed today.
Even though consumer confidence may have risen due to a large amount of spending during Christmas, I see this is a good opportunity as the good news spread. The market is still enjoying the leftover consumer confidence from the three months end of 2010. However, the gain in the consumer confidence may act as a boost to both producers and consumers, encouraging them to do more purchasing and selling.
Economists forecast U.S. growth on upswing in 2011
A poll was taken of 46 economists who say that there has been an increasing amount of optimism about the U.S. recovery. These economists predict the economy to annually grow at a rate of 3.2% to 3.4% each quarter of this year, 2011. Economists see this growth becoming ‘self-reinforcing’ which is a nice change of pace for our economy. Businesses are expected to use the growth of their stronger sales to begin hiring more aggressively and generate a higher income. As a soon to be college graduate, this is very reliving to hear. Unemployment rate is starting to drop and jobs will open up and U.S. corporations will be more confident and demanding. The job market is finally becoming more stable as the economy recovers.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Greece - World's largest solar farm
Japan Just a Warm-Up
Increasingly Confident Fed Is Set for First Meeting of 2011
The Federal Reserve is also try to improve its communication and transparency by scheduling meetings with the Federal Open Market Committee.
Ben Bernanke stated this about the future of the economy, “increased evidence that a self-sustaining recovery in consumer and business spending may be taking hold.”
The economy is expected to grow by up to 4 percent this year, above the 2.5 percent needed just to maintain the unemployment rate at its current level of 9.4 percent. Inemployment is expected to remain close to 8 percent
A great burden for Zapatero to bear
First it was Greece, then Ireland, then Portugal and now it’s Spain. While in the US the economic crisis is almost over, in Europe bailout of countries is still a major topic of the news. After recent subprime mortgage crisis, it looks like most of the countries who was effected by the crisis undergone some changes in their economic system. This article talks about some of the reforms that president of Spain, José Luis RodrÃguez Zapatero, is proposing. Mainly most of the reforms call for new transparency rules for banks, to clarify exposure to toxic loans. This article once again illustrates just how big the role of the government is in the economy of a country.
U.S. companies fear the Chinese New Year
The problem is old, but the negative effect that it causes has been increasing recently. American firms fear that many workers will not come back to their jobs after the holiday. This will cause a great shortage in the U.S. for products that are made in China.
The problem is contributed by the Chinese government incentives to keep the peasant inland to work on farm rather than leave home to work in factories. Moreover, the quality of life in China has improve significantly over the years, causing workers to look for better jobs with higher wage.
As manufacturing cost is increasing in China, due to lower supply of workers and demand for higher wage, many American firms are moving their factories to other countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, India, and Thailand. Others even choose to produce their products in the U.S., since this will help retailers to fill their inventory much faster.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
China Growth Shows Contrast With U.S.
Traders Beat on Pay as Gap Survives Crisis
The Rise of The Redback
Rising Commodity Prices: Blessing or a Curse?
China in the Mind of America"-Sputnik moment
The situation seems dire: drawing the comparison to the Sputnik moment in 1957. However this seems like a cliche political moment. A large number of Americans are overreacting to the rise of China. Many US political figures are not helping matters by exporting the blame of tough times, to pacify their respective constituencies.
Paul Romer, a Stanford University professor and Hoover Institution fellow mentions in his podcast that it is absurd to think that China will be anywhere close to the US in GDP per capita in the next 5 years. He goes on to mention that as China continues to grow, it's production will experience diminishing returns and it is unlikely that China will ever economically surpass the USA!
America is currently intimately interlocked with China in international trade. To view China as a threat is illogical. As whenever the American economy suffers, the Chinese economy feels the pain as well.