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German Industrial Output Drops More Than Expectations

“BERLIN (AP) — Industrial production in Germany dropped by an unexpectedly sharp 2.2 percent in April compared with the previous month, official data showed Wednesday, sending a downbeat signal about the economy’s ability to shrug aside the eurozone debt crisis.

The decline was led by a 3.6 decrease in production of capital goods such as factory machinery and a 3.7 percent fall in production of consumer goods, the Economy Ministry said.

The drop followed a 2.2 percent month-on-month gain in March — a figure that was revised sharply downward from the initial reading of 2.8 percent.”

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Chinese Exports and Non Manufacturing Grow at a Slower Pace

China’s non-manufacturing industries expanded at the slowest pace in more than a year, as export orders declined and weakness in real estate countered strength in retailing and leasing, an official survey indicated.

The purchasing managers’ index fell to 55.2 in May from 56.1 in April, the National Bureau of Statistics and China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said yesterday in Beijing. That’s the lowest reading since March 2011 when the federation started seasonally adjusting the data.”

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Documentary : Vox Populi – Methods of Manipulation

When i was a young pleb i would watch episodes of M*A*S*H* waiting for my mom to get home from work. Any way, the cast became a pseudo group of surrogate  parents and i would take lots of lessons to heart. The show was well written and witty.

I remember a saying from the show: “in order to understand what it means to be sane, one must be a little insane. You have to cross the line of sanity to know where it is.”

That is how i view this weeks documentary. There is good historical information to learn for those who are not up to speed with the gentlemanly knowledge that flies around these here interwebs. But some of you will say a tin foil hat will be needed to listen to these outrageous claims. I think that description is a way for people to deal with the world.

Put something in a box, label it, and you’ll always know how to deal with it. Bad philosophy imo. Once you do that, you leave it alone and never really examine it. Therefore if it changes you do not recognize it.

So call me what ever you like, but i enjoy exploring the outrageous and then going on a fact finding mission to discover how outrageous those claims are or not.

Cheers on your weekend !

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqrdHLzvIV4 450 300]

Megan ‘Verb’ Kargher are proud to present Vox Populi, Methods of Manipulation. It has become increasingly evident that large portions of the planet are descending with alarming speed into Orwellian police states. What is the New World Order and what are their plans for mankind? How can we stop the corruption now? Join me as I travel in search of what is really going on in the world in which we live. Featuring interviews with David Icke, Max Igan, Freeman, Jordan Maxwell, Dr. George Rhodes, Ben Stewart and Charlie Veitch.

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zz5jIxzneMA 450 300]

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The Hidden Bull Is Going Solo

This is a great argument for a dynamic of economic growth. Single person households are on the rise and they out spend families with children. They now occupy 28% of all households.

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GDP Growth Slows in India to 5.3% as Export Growth to Europe Gets Hurt

India’s economic growth weakened to a nine-year low last quarter, hurt by an investment slowdown that has undermined the rupee and jeopardized Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s development agenda. Stocks fell and bonds climbed.

Gross domestic product rose 5.3 percent in the three months ended March from a year earlier, compared with 6.1 percent in the previous quarter, the Central Statistical Office said in a statement in New Delhi today. The median of 31 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 6.1 percent gain. GDP climbed 6.5 percent in the year to March, the office said.”

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All of Ireland’s Work May Be in Vain

Ireland has made great strides to repair its damaged economy and rising debt problem. Unfortunately, Greece, Spain, and Italy have crated uncertainty after all the recent moves to build confidence.

More importantly, it appears that no matter how well the country has done getting back on its feet, it may not be enough as debt will reach 120% to GDP.

The world needs a huge shot of global growth to break the debt spiral so many countries face.

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Consumer Retail in China to Surpass U.S. in 2015

“The U.S. is fast being replaced by China as the world’s most important consumer market.  That doesn’t mean each country has similar tastes.  But broad appeal products like Coca Cola and Nike will find more consumers in China than in the U.S., and if one Chinese official is right, they might find that market better than their home one as early as 2015.”

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China’s Xinhua News Agency States China Has No Intention of Rolling Out Stimulus Programs

Asian markets have rallied on hopes of a stimulus program as of late. Xinhua news agency is reporting that the Chinese government has no plans for a large scale stimulus package despite. Piemier Wen Jiabao stated last week he would like to boost growth, but markets are speculating on stimulus.

“The Chinese government’s intention is very clear: it will not roll out another massive stimulus plan to seek high economic growth,” Xinhua said in the seventh paragraph of a Chinese- language article on economic policy. “The current efforts for stabilizing growth will not repeat the old way of three years ago.”

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Fed’s Plosser Says U.S. to Withstand Euro Fallout: WSJ

(Reuters) – The United States is well poised to withstand any fallout from Europe’s escalating debt crisis, a top Federal Reserve executive told the Wall Street Journal.

Read the article here.

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Chinese Manufacturing Under Stress

China’s manufacturing sector continued to shrink in May, according to preliminary data released Thursday.

HSBC’s Flash Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 48.7 in May from 49.3 the previous month. Any reading below 50 indicates the manufacturing sector has been shrinking.

While the news comes as yet another sign of weakness for China, the outlook for the world’s second largest economy is still far from clear.

Mark Williams, chief Asia economist for Capital Economics, said the latest PMI report seems to indicate a slowdown in China’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the economy. He said it also runs counter to other reports showing that income is growing for urban households and migrant workers.

“This weak PMI reading, and the general climate of economic uncertainty, suggests that a pickup in consumer spending growth is unlikely to lift the economy out of its current malaise,” said Williams, in a research note.

But he believes the economy could gain steam going forward, with a boost from the government.

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Congressional Budget Office: Any Way You Slice It, We Are Fucked

Economic Effects of Reducing the Fiscal Restraint That Is Scheduled to Occur in 2013

Policymakers are facing difficult trade-offs in formulating the nation’s fiscal policies. On the one hand, if the fiscal policies currently in place are continued in coming years, the revenues collected by the federal government will fall far short of federal spending, putting the budget on an unsustainable path. On the other hand, immediate spending cuts or tax increases would represent an added drag on the weak economic expansion.

In fact, under current law, increases in taxes and, to a lesser extent, reductions in spending will reduce the federal budget deficit dramatically between 2012 and 2013—a development that some observers have referred to as a “fiscal cliff”—and will dampen economic growth in the short term. CBO has analyzed the economic effects of reducing that fiscal restraint. It finds that reducing or eliminating the fiscal restraint would boost economic growth in 2013, but that adopting such a policy without imposing comparable restraint in future years would have substantial economic costs over the longer run.

How Substantial is the Fiscal Restraint in 2013?

CBO estimates that the combination of policies under current law will reduce the federal budget deficit by $607 billion, or 4.0 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), between fiscal years 2012 and 2013. The resulting weakening of the economy will lower taxable incomes and raise unemployment, generating a reduction in tax revenues and an increase in spending on such items as unemployment insurance. With that economic feedback incorporated, the deficit will drop by $560 billion between fiscal years 2012 and 2013, CBO projects.

If measured for calendar years 2012 and 2013, the amount of fiscal restraint is even larger. Most of the policy changes that reduce the deficit are scheduled to take effect at the beginning of calendar year 2013, so budget figures for fiscal year 2013—which begins in October 2012—reflect only about three-quarters of the effects of those policies on an annual basis. According to CBO’s estimates, the tax and spending policies that will be in effect under current law will reduce the federal budget deficit by 5.1 percent of GDP between calendar years 2012 and 2013 (with the resulting economic feedback included, the reduction will be smaller).

With that Fiscal Restraint, What Will Economic Growth Be in 2013?

Under those fiscal conditions, which will occur under current law, growth in real (inflation-adjusted) GDP in calendar year 2013 will be just 0.5 percent, CBO expects—with the economy projected to contract at an annual rate of 1.3 percent in the first half of the year and expand at an annual rate of 2.3 percent in the second half. Given the pattern of past recessions as identified by the National Bureau of Economic Research, such a contraction in output in the first half of 2013 would probably be judged to be a recession.

How Would Eliminating or Reducing the Fiscal Restraint Affect the Economy in the Short Run?

CBO analyzed what would happen if lawmakers changed fiscal policy in late 2012 to remove or offset all of the policies that are scheduled to reduce the federal budget deficit by 5.1 percent of GDP between calendar years 2012 and 2013. In that case, CBO estimates, the growth of real GDP in calendar year 2013 would lie in a broad range around 4.4 percent, well above the 0.5 percent projected for 2013 under current law.

How Would Eliminating or Reducing the Fiscal Restraint Affect the Economy in the Long Run?

However, eliminating or reducing the fiscal restraint scheduled to occur next year without imposing comparable restraint in future years would reduce output and income in the longer run relative to what would occur if the scheduled fiscal restraint remained in place. If all current policies were extended for a prolonged period, federal debt held by the public—currently about 70 percent of GDP, its highest mark since 1950—would continue to rise much faster than GDP.

Such a path for federal debt could not be sustained indefinitely, and policy changes would be required at some point. The more that debt increased before policies were changed, the greater would be the negative consequences—for the nation’s future output and income, for the burden imposed by interest payments on the federal debt, for policymakers’ ability to use tax and spending policies to respond to unexpected challenges, and for the likelihood of a sudden fiscal crisis. And the longer the necessary adjustments in policies were delayed, the more uncertain individuals and businesses would be about future government policies, and the more drastic the ultimate changes in policy would need to be.

What Might Policymakers Do Under These Circumstances?

They could address the short-term economic challenge by eliminating or reducing the fiscal restraint scheduled to occur next year without imposing comparable restraint in future years—but that would have substantial economic costs over the longer run. Alternatively, they could move rapidly to address the longer-run budgetary problem by allowing the full measure of fiscal restraint now embodied in current law to take effect next year—but that would have substantial economic costs in the short run. Or, if policymakers wanted to minimize the short-run costs of narrowing the deficit very quickly while also minimizing the longer-run costs of allowing large deficits to persist, they could enact a combination of policies: changes in taxes and spending that would widen the deficit in 2013 relative to what would occur under current law but that would reduce deficits later in the decade relative to what would occur if current policies were extended for a prolonged period.

Source

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Here’s How Food Prices REALLY Affect Restaurant Menu Items

Momofuku empire chief fDavid Chang talk(s) to Bloomberg about how damn expensive food is these days. First his noodle guy is saying they need to lock in wheat prices for the rest of the year, then premium beef gets so expensive that at “Ssam Bar recently we’ve gone to a very duck-heavy menu.” And while Chang seems willing to pay for quality, he’s not sure his customers feel the same way: “I don’t know that America and consumers are ready to really see that financial shock.”

CLICK HERE TO SEE VIDEO ON EATER.COM

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Leading Indicators in China Give Investors Hope That Economic Expansion is Steady

“A leading index for China rose at the same pace in April as the prior month, offering investors some comfort that the world’s second-biggest economy may avoid a deeper slowdown.

The gauge increased 0.8 percent from March to 232.4, the New York-based Conference Board said in an e-mailed statement today, citing a preliminary reading. That compares with a 0.8 percent gain in March and 1 percent in February.”

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OECD Warns Of Severe European Recession

PARIS (AP) — The 17-country eurozone risks falling into a “severe recession,” the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development warned on Tuesday, as it called on governments and Europe’s central bank to act quickly to stop the slowdown spilling over into the global economy.

OECD Chief Economist Pier Carlo Padoan said the eurozone is “close to” the possible scenario of a 2 percent economic contraction this year that the Paris-based think tank laid out as its worst-case scenario last November.

Padoan made his comments as the OECD, which comprises the world’s most developed economies, released its twice-yearly global economic outlook. The report forecasts a longer and deeper contraction in the eurozone than predicted in November, with the eurozone economy expected to shrink in 2012, and only manage a feeble recovery in 2013.

“Today we see the situation in the euro area close to the possible downside scenario” in the OECD’s November report, “which if materializing could lead to a severe recession in the euro area and with spillovers in the rest of the world,” Padan told reporters before the report’s release.

The OECD’s new forecast shows Europe falling behind the United States, where growth is seen accelerating both in 2012 and 2013.

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Factories Begin to Shift Back to US

A new report offers the first empirical evidence of “reshoring” where jobs once lost to emerging economies are being moved back to the U.S.

Read the article here.

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