Stuart Staniford notes that the number of trucks and passenger vehicles in China has been growing at about 23% each year.
In Order to Know Where You Are Going…
…you need to know how you got where you are. From the abstract to a working paper by myself, Barry Eichengreen and Hiro Ito, entitled A Forensic Analysis of Global Imbalances:
We re-examine the determinants of current account balances applying updated data to the framework based on Chinn and Ito (2007). …
The significance of OPEC announcements
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) today announced that its members could not reach an agreement to change OPEC’s production quotas. How significant is that announcement? In my opinion, not very.
Growth Forecasts and Informational Rigidities
From a new IMF working paper by Prakash Loungani:
We document information rigidity in forecasts for real GDP growth in 46 countries over the past two decades….
Life without QE2
Last November, the Federal Reserve announced a plan to purchase $75 billion each month in intermediate-term Treasury securities, a measure popularly described as a second round of quantitative easing, or QE2. June is the last month of this program, and it looks unlikely that the Fed will extend it, causing some observers to be concerned. My view is that QE2 had relatively modest effects, and such benefits as it provided should not evaporate with the end of the purchases.
Debt ceiling politics
Here’s a link to an interview with a local TV station.
May Employment Report
The Employment Situation release for May was not entirely a surprise, given Jim’s post yesterday, but contained unwelcome news nonetheless. WSJ RTE quotes Stephen Stanley of Pierpoint Securities thus: “…consider me worried”.
A weakening economy
Incoming data over the last two weeks paint a consistent picture that the U.S. economy, which had been growing at a disappointingly slow rate, has weakened further.
Some Brief Thoughts on Sovereign Defaults
Sovereign default experiences are a staple in international finance. Here are a couple bits of information from a vast literature.
How Innocuous Is a Treasury Default?
Steven Englander, Global Head of G-10 FX strategy for Citi is not very sanguine about a Treasury default, especially as it pertains to foreign holders of Treasurys. From an email today (not online):