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To: tejek who wrote (634495)11/4/2011 11:06:03 AM
From: Alighieri  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1578590
 
October Jobs Report: Deja Vu All Over AgainBy Daniel Gross | Contrary Indicator – 1 hour 56 minutes ago

This is getting repetitive. The October jobs report, out Friday morning, is very similar to the reports of recent months. Some 80,000 new payroll jobs were created, and the unemployment rate ticked down to 9.0 percent. It highlights a trend of an employment market that's recovering very slowly, with workers eking out meager gains.

A few items worth noting:

The "conservative recovery" continues. For months we've been noticing that, every month, the private sector adds jobs while the public sector cuts them. It's been the case for much of the past year that the U.S. economy is growing not because of government spending, but in spite of government cutbacks. In October, the private sector created 104,000 jobs, with gains led by professional and business services (33,000) and leisure and hospitality (22,000). Manufacturing posted a small 5,000 jobs gain. Meanwhile, governments at all levels cut 24,000 jobs. Since May 2010, government has cut one million jobs while the private sector has added 2.28 million positions.

Labor market frustration remains at high levels. The headline unemployment rate is only one of several data points contained in the report. And while the 9.0 percent rate is pretty dreadful, other metrics bear witness to a high and depressing level of labor market weakness. The unemployment rate for teenagers stands at 24.1 percent. The employment-population ratio checked in at a truly weak 58.4 percent. And the U-6, an alternate measure of unemployment that includes people who have given up people who are marginally attached to the workforce and people who are working part-time but would rather be working full-time, stands at 16.2 percent. That's down from 16.5 percent in September 2011, and down from 17.0 percent in October 2010, but it's still much too high.

Workers with jobs are making limited gains. While the number of jobs increased, the labor market remains remarkably loose. And that means corporations are able to get away with minimal wage increases. Average weekly earnings rose a smidge in October, to $795.42 from $793.70 in September. Average weekly wages are up just 1.8 percent in the past 12 months.

The trend is your friend. Each month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics looks back at the data reported in the prior two months and issues a revised figure on job creation. In the last two years, it has been common for prior months to be revised upwards. That trend continued. The August figure, previously reported as a gain of 57,000 jobs, was nearly doubled to a gain of 104,000 jobs. The September figure, originally reported as a 103,000 jobs gain was revised sharply higher to a gain of 158,000. In all, BLS discovered 102,000 jobs that it hadn't noted previously. So far this year, then, the economy has added 1.435 million jobs.

Here's something else that's repetitive: The jobs market won't do much to spur the bodies in Washington that have the ability to do something about the situation to act. The Federal Reserve is bound by its dual mandate to promote full employment. But Chairman Ben Bernanke on Wednesday essentially indicated that, even though the central bank is failing miserably at carrying out that mandate, he doesn't plan to do anything. And Congress and the White House are locked in their usual cycle of dysfunction. President Obama has proposed a series of measures that economists and neutral organizations agree would spur job creation. Republicans in the House and Senate, aided by a few Democrats, choose not to pass them. It's worth repeating: The recovery in the jobs market is taking place despite government, not because of it. And that's likely to be the case for next month as well.

Daniel Gross is economics editor at Yahoo! Finance.

Email him at grossdaniel11@yahoo.com; follow him on Twitter @grossdm.



To: tejek who wrote (634495)11/4/2011 11:08:10 AM
From: Alighieri1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578590
 
John Boehner: Debt Deal Will Include New Tax Revenues

AP/The Huffington Post Posted: 11/4/11 10:19 AM ET








WASHINGTON -- House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday that any bipartisan agreement reached by the congressional deficit-reduction supercommittee will need to include some new tax revenue.

Most Congressional Republicans have signed a "taxpayer protection pledge" -- devised by the Grover Norquist-led group Americans for Tax Reform -- vowing not to raise taxes. When asked about Norquist on Thursday, Boehner dismissed him as "some random person in America" but later revised his comments to say that "Norquist, like millions of Americans, believes that raising taxes is not good for our economy."

According to CBS News, Boehner insisted that Republicans would only compromise on tax revenue if Democrats were willing to take significant steps to shore up entitlement programs.

"Without real reform on the entitlement side, I'm not even going to put any new revenue on the table," Boehner said. Entitlement programs include Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

Any new tax revenue would not come from raising rates, he said, but from overhauling the tax code, sweeping out loopholes and deductions in order to reduce individual and corporate rates.

"I do think that our efforts to have a flatter, fairer tax system, with our targets being 25 percent top rates for corporations, 25 percent top rates for individuals, is achievable," Boehner said. "That means you clean out all the garbage. I think it's very important that it get done."

Boehner says he remains committed to helping the deficit panel succeed and that Congress should approve its recommendations if it produces a plan to curb the government's gush of red ink. He expressed confidence on Thursday that the group would meet its goal.



"I didn't agree to set this thing up with any idea that it wouldn't succeed," Boehner said. "I'd love to exceed the goal, but we have to meet the goal, and I'm going to put every ounce of effort in to make sure that we do."

Shortly after meeting with reporters, Boehner met again with supercommittee Republicans.

The panel has three weeks to come up with recommendations that would be given an automatic vote by both House and Senate.

The deficit panel appears deadlocked over demands by Democrats that it raise substantial new revenue. Republicans are united against the idea, though a GOP proposal last week counted new Medicare premiums and larger contributions from federal workers to their retirement as revenue. Republicans also assumed about $200 billion in revenue would come from the economic growth associated with reforming the loophole-cluttered tax code.

In a surprise development, the three GOP senators in the so-called Gang of Six group that forged a bipartisan deficit proposal including about $2 trillion in new revenues signed on to a letter drafted by conservative stalwart Jim DeMint, R-S.C., that called on the supercommittee to propose a solution with "no net tax increase."

Boehner discussed a potential deficit deal with President Barack Obama this summer that would have allowed up to $800 billion in new revenues as part of a comprehensive tax overhaul bill that would have eliminated many tax breaks and used the savings to lower income tax rates.

However, the Boehner-Obama talks fell apart.

Boehner said Thursday that "all kinds of discussions" are going on now.

"I think there's room for revenue but there's clearly a limit to the revenues that may be available," Boehner said.



To: tejek who wrote (634495)11/4/2011 11:12:51 AM
From: Alighieri2 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578590
 
Joe Walsh Praised As 'Pro-Family' By Family Research Council, Despite Child Support Issues




Though his family woes have been quite public as of late, U.S. Rep. Joe Walsh announced Thursday that the Family Research Council Action committee has named him a "True Blue" member of Congress for his "unwavering commitment and consistent support in defense of life and the family."

Walsh, a Tea Party favorite and a regular on cable news shows, has been on the defense in recent months after his ex-wife sued him for $117,437 in allegedly unpaid child support. Laura Walsh claims the congressman didn't pay up for his three children, but loaned his own campaign $35,000 and took international vacations. Walsh has denied these allegations, but a judge recently ordered him to produce proof that he paid up.

“We thank Congressman Walsh who has voted consistently to defend faith, family and freedom,” FRCA President Tony Perkins said, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. “Congressman Walsh and other ‘True Blue Members’ have voted to repeal Obamacare, de-fund Planned Parenthood, end government funding for abortion within the health care law, uphold the Defense of Marriage Act, and continue support for school choice. I applaud their commitment to uphold the institutions of marriage and family.”

Walsh was the only member of Congress from Illinois to receive the distinction.



To: tejek who wrote (634495)11/4/2011 1:22:05 PM
From: PROLIFE1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578590
 
LMAO!!!....yeah....we just hands rra money to da black man cause we likes him.........

Oslappy knows exactly where the libbers are gathered up and he exploits every stinking one of them...the Campaigner in chief knows nothing else.