'거품붕괴'에 해당되는 글 1건

  1. 2016.01.14 대공황에서 중산층 이하가 회복되기는 불가능

미국은 대공황에 버금가는 버블붕괴가 2008년에 있었지요. 대규모 QE로 실업률은 떨어지고 집값을 오르고 경제회복세가 완연하지만 소비가 생각만큼 살고 있지 않고 미국 가계에 중요한 기름값도 아주 좋은 가격으로 떨어졌지만 체감은 크지않다고들 하지요. 이미 회복했거나 더 잘된 사람들은 1%의 가진자라는 사실을 다시한번 일깨워주는 data입니다. 경제붕괴는 중산층 이하에게는 치명적입니다. 살아생전에 회복하기는 어렵다고 보는 것이 맞을겁니다.


국가는 이런 거품이 일어나지도 붕괴되지도 않게 막는게 국가의 의무라는 것을 잊으면 안되겠습니다.

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http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2016/01/12/six-years-later-93-of-u-s-counties-havent-recovered-from-recession-study-finds/

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93% of America’s Counties Still Haven’t Recovered from Great Recession


In his valedictory State of the Union address, President Obama declared that, “Anyone claiming that America’s economy is in decline is peddling fiction.” By almost any standard, he’s right. Aside from the silliness of taking credit for “gas under two bucks a gallon,” all the indicators he points to, especially job growth, are moving in the right direction.

It’s worth noting, though, that the recovery from the Great Recession is far from complete and, more importantly, highly uneven.  Indeed, a new study finds, “93% of counties in the U.S. have failed to fully recover.” Eric Morath summarizes for the WSJ:

Nationwide, 214 counties, or 7% of 3,069, had recovered last year to prerecession levels on four indicators: total employment, the unemployment rate, size of the economy and home values, a study from the National Association of Counties released Tuesday found.

The reality is slowing population growth and industry shifts mean some parts of the country will likely never fully recover. But by the end of last year, more counties had not recovered on any one of the four indicators, 16%, than had recovered on all of them.

“Americans don’t live in a single economic place,” said Emilia Istrate, the association’s director of research and outreach and one of the study’s authors. “It tells you why many Americans don’t feel the good economic numbers they see on TV.”

As was the case in 2014, when just 65 counties had fully recovered, most of those that bounced back are in states benefiting from the energy boom. Last year, 72 of the recovered counties were in Texas, the most of any state. Nebraska followed with 22. Minnesota, Kentucky, North Dakota, Montana and Kansas each had at least 10 fully recovered counties.

Meanwhile, in 27 states, not a single county had fully recovered.

Some of the nation’s largest counties finally recovered from the recession in 2015, including the counties containing Denver, San Francisco, San Jose, Dallas and Columbus, Ohio. In 2014, no county with more than 500,000 residents had fully recovered. Last year, 17 of 126 had.

The recovery is spreading out from the energy-rich center of the country—in part because a massive drop in oil prices is reversing job creation there while providing an economic benefit to larger metro areas near the coasts.

Numerous counties on the West Coast, Nevada, New York, Florida and the Carolinas recorded better than 4% economic growth last year, the NACo study found. (The entire country appears to be growing at about a 2% rate.) But a large swath of counties in Texas, Illinois and other states in the middle of the country suffered economic contractions last year.

Now, on the one hand, this is highly misleading. As has been repeatedly noted since the county-by-county voting maps gained popularity during the bitter dispute over the 2000 presidential election results, looking at the country in that way can be very misleading. After all, most counties have very few people living in them while others are highly concentrated. Los Angeles County, California has slightly more than 10 million residents.  That’s more people than live in 41 of the 50 states.  Cook County, Illinois has over 5 million residents, more than all but 22 of the states. A Business Insider piece from a couple years ago noted that half the population of the United States lived in 146 counties out of more than 3000 in the country. Visually, it’s even more stark:


http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/93-of-americas-counties-still-havent-recovered-from-great-recession/


Posted by 쁘레드