onlooker wrote:lets see if the cornies have a positive spin for this: In 2015, the U.S. Federal Government paid $402 billion just to service the interest on its debt. This figure can be found at TreasuryDirect.gov. According to the Federal Reserve Q1 2016 Statistical Release, the U.S. Federal Government spent a total of $4.02 trillion in 2015. Thus, the interest on U.S. debt consumed 10% of the total budget.
Subjectivist wrote:I know it is anecdotal reporting, but near my house there have been several new houses built on the edges of farm fields even though homes in town have been for sale for months. Apparently folks want a brand new house rather than a pre existing house 50 or more years old. Seems very wasteful to me.
U.S. services companies grew last month at the fastest pace in nearly a year, potential good news for the U.S. economy.
The Institute for Supply Management says its services index jumped to 57.1 in September, the highest point since 58.3 last October. It was a big improvement on the August reading of 51.4, the lowest since February 2010. Anything above 50 signals growth.
New orders, production, export orders and employment grew faster last month.
Services firms have now grown for 80 straight months and have been a source of strength in an economy that has registered lackluster growth since late last year.
The ISM is a trade group of purchasing managers. Its services survey covers businesses that employ the vast majority of workers, including retail, health care and financial companies.
[...]
Jobless Claims Near Four-Decade Low Ahead of U.S. Payrolls Data
Filings for U.S. unemployment benefits fell last week to the second-lowest level since 1973, as employers show scant willingness to fire workers amid a tightening labor market.
Jobless claims dropped by 5,000 to 249,000 in the week ended Oct. 1, a Labor Department report showed Thursday in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey called for 256,000. Continuing claims declined to the lowest level since 2000.
Filings were just a hair above the four-decade low of 248,000 from April, a sign of minimal layoffs ahead of Friday’s monthly employment report. Companies are going head-to-head in finding skilled applicants amid record job openings, indications of a healthy labor market that may encourage Federal Reserve officials to raise the benchmark interest rate before the end of the year.
onlooker wrote:The Great Debt Unwind: Business Bankruptcies Soar 38%
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-10-0 ... es-soar-38
US weekly jobless claims total 246,000 vs 254,000 estimate
Reuters
The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits held at a 43-year low last week, pointing to sustained labor market strength that could pave the way for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates in December.
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits were unchanged at a seasonally adjusted 246,000 for the week ended Oct. 8, the lowest reading since November 1973, the Labor Department said on Thursday.
Claims for the prior week were revised to show 3,000 fewer applications received than previously reported.
It was the 84th consecutive week that claims remained below the 300,000 threshold, which is associated with robust labor market conditions. That is the longest stretch since 1970, when the labor market was much smaller.
More Americans bought new homes in September, a sign that demand remains strong despite a shortage of properties on the market.
Recent hiring gains coupled with low interest rates have bolstered the market for new homes. But builders have largely struggled to keep pace with new construction, creating a shortage of listings for would-be buyers.
New-home sales advanced 3.1% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 593,000, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. The gains were concentrated in the Northeast, Midwest and South, as sales tumbled last month in the West.
So far this year, sales have increased 13% compared to the same period in 2015.
[...]
Go ahead — ask the boss for a raise.
The jobs report released Friday by the Labor Department suggests the time finally may be right to demand a fatter paycheck.
The October report showed employers added 161,000 jobs — and paid workers more. Average hourly earnings rose by 10 cents to $25.92 last month — and that gain followed September's increase of 8 cents an hour.
In all, average hourly earnings have risen by 2.8 percent over the past year — the fastest pace since the end of the Great Recession. That's a lot considering that the consumer price index has risen only 1.5 percent in the same 12 months. So workers now have more buying power at the store.
"As the job market gets tighter, firms are responding to tougher competition for workers by raising pay," PNC chief economist Stuart Hoffman said in his assessment. "This is a big positive for income growth, consumer spending, and the overall economy."
[...]
pstarr wrote:The bucket of instances measured to circumscribe average wage includes Donald Trump. I'd rather you not pollute the metric and use median wage instead.
Outcast_Searcher wrote:
Meanwhile things continue to get better overall in the US labor market.
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