BLS DAILY REPORT, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2000 Virtually all indicators of the health of the U.S. labor market showed vigorous growth last year, as nonfarm payrolls added 2.7 million workers and employment hit a new record high of 129.6 million in the fourth quarter, according to a review of major developments across industries and occupations by BLS economists. The jobless rate fell to a 30-year low and a record 64.3 percent of the population was working last year. "Almost half of the employment growth over the year occurred in the higher paying managerial and professional, specialty occupations," BLS economists Jennifer Martel and Laura Kelter write in the February issue of BLS' Monthly Labor Review. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-12; text, page E-1). The record-breaking U.S. economic expansion should continue, but not at the rapid pace of the final quarter of 1999, according to the Conference Board's index of leading indicators. "The biggest risk to the ongoing expansion continues to be interest-rate increases and the prospect of still more Federal Reserve Board action," says Ken Goldstein, a Conference Board economist. "The data now suggests that some sectors are beginning to respond to Fed tightening, but certainly not enough to prevent the economy from reaching new records for longevity." ... (Daily Labor Report, page D-1)_____The decline in leading indicators was the first in the index since September and the largest since January 1996. It was also deeper than analysts had expected. ... (Washington Post, page E2)_____The index of leading economic indicators fell in February for the first time in 5 months as factory orders for capital goods, building permits, and stocks declined. The index decreased 0.3 percent in February, after rising 0.2 percent in January. The drop in the index, a gauge of future growth, comes after three successive monthly increases, and because of that it does not signal that the record economic expansion is in jeopardy. ... (New York Times, page C6) _____The stock market's wild ride yesterday may have been nerve-wracking for investors, but some economists say a slumping market can be good news for the U.S. economy -- as long as the descent doesn't get too steep too fast. For all the breathless fears of a Wall Street crash, mainstream economists these days are still largely worried that gross domestic product is growing too rapidly. ... The Conference Board reports that its index of leading indicators -- a measure designed to predict growth over the next 3 to 6 months -- fell in February by 0.3 percent, the largest 1-month decline in more than 4 years. ... (Wall Street Journal, page A2) More work stoppages (151) occurred in manufacturing during 1999 than in other industries, according to the first annual report on collectively bargained settlements and work stoppages published recently by the Bureau of National Affairs. The report includes a 10-year statistical table of negotiated wage increases by both industry and region. ... The report tracked work stoppages by industry, union, and issues. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-12). Small employers are not steering clear of establishing retirement plans simply because of red tape and administrative costs, but also because of a lack of pension knowledge and a perceived lack of interest on the part of employees, according to a study by the Employee Benefit Research Institute. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-7). The "new economy" is turning out to be the economic equivalent of the collapse of the Soviet Union -- a dramatic shift that might have ushered in a long-promised sense of security, but instead has brought about a period of messy change, writes Glenn Kessler in The Washington Post (page E1). The economy, on one level, keeps surpassing expectations. Unemployment plunges but inflation doesn't ignite. Wages are rising. Budget deficits have disappeared and the nation is starting to pay off its debt. But many of the old rules about the economy and financial markets no longer appear to work, leaving policymakers at the White House and the Federal Reserve struggling to find their way. ... The world economy is likely to grow by about 4 percent in 2000, the International Monetary Fund chief says. He called current U.S. growth unsustainable and said there would have to be a balancing of mismatched expansion rates, likely in the form of a U.S. slowdown and a pickup in Japan and other economies. ... (Washington Post, page E2). After years of treading carefully around the issue of why so many countries stay poor or become poorer, the United Nations put a lot of the blame on bad government, a message many leaders seeking more aid and debt relief will not want to hear. ... The report makes "good governance" the top priority in poverty-fighting by the U.N. development program. Without good governance, reliance on trickle-down economic development and a host of other strategies will not work, the report concludes. ... (New York Times, page A11).
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- Re: Re: The new economy, (continued)
- 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
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- 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
- [Fwd: IAFFE in Istanbul/TURKEY], Xxxx Xxxxx Xxxxxx Tue 04 Apr 2000, 05:16 GMT