- by New Deal democrat
Still nerdy after all these years
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
My “Weekly Indicators” post is up at Seeking Alpha.
There are some minor changes, but no big turns in trends. But the recent change in trend that has been further reinforced is the sharp deceleration in growth in withholding tax payments that began in October. The bulk of the evidence suggests that this is not a result of end of year tax planning, but real signal of a slowdown in labor force and payroll growth.
As usual, clicking over and reading will bring you up to date on all of the relevant economic data, and bring me a little pocket change for my efforts.
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
- by New Deal democrat
Probably the most important economic news this entire week was this morning’s ISM services report. Services are about 75% of the economy, and this report was for November, which means it is the most wide-ranging and current datapoint we have at the moment.
- by New Deal democrat
Although not published by the federal government itself, the Fed’s measure of industrial production relies on some federal data, and thus it was not updated during the government shutdown - which means that this morning’s update is likewise stale, being for September.
Industrial production has been much less central to the US economy since the “China shock,” but it remains important for the goods producing sector. In September, headline industrial production rose 0.1%, while manufacturing production was unchanged. The above graph normalizes both measures to April 2022. As you can see, between spring 2022 and late 2024, production generally declined before surging in the first six months of this year. Total production exceeded that level just barely in July, while manufacturing production has stalled without reaching that level: