BLS DAILY REPORT, TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 2000 RELEASED TODAY: In February, 210 metropolitan areas recorded unemployment rates below the U.S. average, while 114 areas registered higher rates. Eleven metropolitan areas had rates below 2.0 percent, with five of these located in the Midwest and four in the South. Of the 11 areas with jobless rates over 10.0 percent, 7 were in California, and 3 were along the Mexican border in other states. ... Factory activity continued to grow in March, but at a slower rate than in February, the National Association of Purchasing Management announced. Rising prices continue to trouble purchasing management surveyed for the report. The chairman of the NAPM Manufacturing Business Survey Committee said the slowing rate of growth could be beneficial because it could lessen price pressures. March marked the 14h consecutive month that manufacturing activity grew and the 107th month in a row that the economy continued to expand. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-2)_____Manufacturing activity expanded for a 14th straight month in March, while rising costs for oil and other raw materials pushed an index of prices paid by factories to its highest level in 5 years. Construction spending rose 1.5 percent in February, to a record annual rate, a separate Commerce Department showed. Together, the reports added to evidence that five Federal Reserve interest rate increases since June have yet to brake growth, analysts say ... (Washington Post, page E5; New York Times, page C18)_____The economy continued to push ahead as manufacturing grew at a strong pace in March and construction spending in February rose for the fifth month in a row. Policy makers are looking for any signs of a substantial slowdown in the economy from the fourth quarter's blazing 7.3 percent annual rate. Economists believe the rate-sensitive construction market would be among the first to feel the effects of the Fed's campaign. But February's data ran contrary to that expectation. ... (Wall Street Journal, page A2) When both imports and exports are taken into account, trade has had a negative effect on economic growth and job creation, according to a brief of the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research organization. ... Robert E. Scott, author of the brief, examined the rise of real gross domestic product between 1992 and 1999 and the four components of the economy that contributed to this rise: personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, international trade (net exports), and government expenditures. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-3). Workplace violence ranked No. 1 as a security concern, by an even higher margin than last year, with more than 280 large company security officials surveyed by Pinkerton, a security services firm. Concerns about Internet and other computer security issues climbed to second from seventh place (Wall Street Journal "Work Week" feature, page A1). Treasurys ended moderately higher as a plunge in technology stocks sent investors scrambling for safer harbors, including government securities. But volume was low, and bond sales were capped by fears that the Labor Department's monthly report on employment trends, due Friday, may show substantial job growth. ... (Wall Street Journal's "Credit Markets" feature, page C24).
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- Re: The new economy, (continued)
- Re: The new economy, Timework Web Tue 04 Apr 2000, 17:48 GMT
- Re: Re: The new economy, Carrol Cox Tue 04 Apr 2000, 17:59 GMT
- New Frontiers of the New Economy, Michael Perelman Tue 04 Apr 2000, 16:38 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 04 Apr 2000, 14:55 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Wed 05 Apr 2000, 12:25 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Thu 06 Apr 2000, 13:56 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Fri 07 Apr 2000, 18:02 GMT
- Marxism and monopoly, Chris Burford Tue 04 Apr 2000, 07:14 GMT
- RE: Marxism and monopoly, Nathan Newman Tue 04 Apr 2000, 11:49 GMT