Senate Approves Fischer Nomination To Fed Board

by The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has confirmed Stanley Fischer as a member of the Federal Reserve board but delayed a separate vote needed to make him the board’s vice chairman.

The vote to put Fischer on the Fed’s board was 68 to 27.

Fischer, a former head of the Bank of Israel, was tapped by President Barack Obama to succeed Janet Yellen in the Fed’s No. 2 job. Yellen vacated that post when she succeeded Ben Bernanke as Fed chair in February.

No date was announced for the separate Senate vote that is required to approve Fischer as vice chairman.

The action on Fischer will ensure that the Fed’s board has four members after another member, Jeremy Stein, leaves at the end of this month to return to his teaching post at Harvard.

US Stocks Trading Higher Ahead Of Fed Minutes

Stocks moved higher in afternoon trading on Wednesday, on track to bounce back from a loss the day before. Investors awaited the release of minutes from last month’s Federal Reserve policy meeting for hints on the central bank’s strategy for interest rates. Tiffany & Co. and Netflix were among the big gainers.

KEEPING SCORE: The Standard & Poor’s 500 index gained 11 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,884 as of 1:27 p.m. Eastern Time. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 139 points, or 0.9 percent, to 16,513. The Nasdaq composite added 24 points, or 0.6 percent, to 4,121.

Read the whole story, here

Despite strong jobs report, wages still flat

From MarketPlace
[UPDATED: FRIDAY, MAY 2, 2014, 9:58am ET]: The April 2014 jobs report from the Department of Labor shows much stronger employment growth than economists expected, and a significantly lower unemployment rate. The unemployment rate fell 0.4 percent to 6.3 percent in April.

Nonfarm private- and public-sector payroll jobs rose by 288,000 in April. The consensus expectation was 215,000. Job gains came across the board, in white- and blue-collar jobs: Professional and business services (+75,000), temporary employment (+24,000), retail trade (+35,000) with car dealerships particularly strong. Bars and restaurants added 33,000 jobs and construction added 32,000 jobs, a welcome recovery for a housing sector that has seemed weak in recent months. Health care and mining also rose strongly. Manufacturing and government jobs were both essentially unchanged.

The unemployment rate decline appears very favorable on its face — 6.3 percent is the lowest unemployment rate since September 2008, as the financial crisis was raging. It hit a peak of 10 percent in October 2009, before beginning its painstakingly slow, steady decline to April 2014’s level.

One force driving the unemployment rate down is a decline in the labor force participation rate — to 62.8 percent in April. The number of people in the civilian labor force — those either working, or unemployed and actively looking for work — declined by 806,000, after increasing by 503,000 in March. Data from the household survey — the source of labor force measures — is considered more volatile than the job-creation numbers derived from the Establishment Survey, and it might be a few months before these trends settle out more clearly.

Job gains turn out to have been better than previously reported during the winter, when the economy slowed dramatically amid severe weather events. February’s figure was revised up from +197,000 to +222,000, and March was revised from +192,000 to +203,000. That puts the three-month average at 238,000. That could signal a moderate, but significant, acceleration of job-creation in the economy. At some point, faster wage growth could even follow.

US Trade Deficit Drops 3.6 Percent In March

by The Associated Press
May 06, 2014 9:13 AM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. trade deficit narrowed in March as exports rebounded to the second highest level on record, led by strong gains in sales of aircraft, autos and farm goods.

The deficit declined to $40.4 billion, down 3.6 percent from a revised February imbalance of $41.9 billion, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. The February deficit had been the biggest trade gap in five months.

U.S. exports rose 2.1 percent to $193.9 billion with exports to Canada and South Korea hitting all-time highs. Imports also rose but by a slower 1.1 percent to $234.3 billion, reflecting increased shipments of cellphones, clothing and other consumer goods and increased demand for heavy machinery and other capital goods.

A smaller trade deficit can boost growth because it means U.S. companies are earning more on their overseas sales.

In 2013, the trade deficit narrowed 11.2 percent to $474.9 billion, helping provide a small boost to overall economic growth.

Analysts are looking for a similar small contribution to growth from a narrowing trade deficit this year. They forecast that an improving global economy will boost demand for U.S. exports. However, imports are also expected to rise as stronger U.S. activity increases consumer spending on foreign products.

For the first three months of this year, trade was a big negative on overall growth, subtracting 0.8 percentage point in the first quarter as exports fell sharply compared to the final three months of last year.

That translated into weak overall growth in the gross domestic product of just 0.1 percent in the January-March quarter. Economists expect GDP growth will rebound in the second quarter to a much stronger rate of 3 percent or better as exports recover from their first quarter decline and other parts of the economy gain momentum as warmer weather spurs activity following the harsh winter.

While the trade deficit narrowed in March, economists said the improvement will not be enough to keep the government from revising its first quarter growth estimate down into negative territory.

But Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, said the important development was that the economy was showing many signs of a rebound in the current quarter.

“The monthly data clearly show a big resurgence in activity and employment over the past couple of months, confirming that the earlier weakness was weather-related,” he said.

Many economists expect the trade deficit will keep narrowing this year as exports, helped by an energy production boom in the United States, grow faster than imports.

A domestic energy boom has boosted exports and reduced America’s dependence on foreign oil. U.S. petroleum exports rose to an all-time high of $137.2 billion last year, up 11 percent from 2012. Energy imports fell 10.9 percent to $369.4 billion as domestic production took the place of some imports.

For March, energy exports increased 3 percent to $11.4 billion while petroleum imports dropped 3.4 percent to $30 billion. For the first three months of this year, petroleum exports are up 7 percent while imports are down 3.4 percent.

The deficit with China dropped 2.2 percent in March to $20.4 billion but remained the largest imbalance with any country. The big trade gap with China has kept pressure on the Obama administration and Congress to take a tougher line on what critics see as unfair trade practices by China to gain trade advantages.

The deficit with the European Union jumped 26.7 percent to $11.5 billion although U.S. exports to Germany, the largest economy in Europe, climbed to the highest level since October 2008.

The trade deficit with Canada was up 3.7 percent to $2.2 billion even though U.S. exports to Canada hit a record high.

Critics say Beijing is manipulating its currency to keep it undervalued against the U.S. dollar. That makes Chinese goods cheaper in the United States and more attractive to American consumers and American product more expensive in China.

The Obama administration is lobbying Congress to pass the “fast track” authority it will need to speed approval of two big trade agreements it is currently negotiating, but election-year politics are complicating the White House effort.

The administration is negotiating one trade agreement with Japan and 10 other Pacific nations. The other agreement would be a trans-Atlantic deal with the 28-nation European Union.

The deals would lower trade barriers and are seen by supporters as a good way to boost U.S. export sales. But critics, including many labor unions, contend that the agreements will open American workers to greater competition and actually end up costing U.S. jobs.

The negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership were a central issue in Obama’s visit to Tokyo last month.

While Obama was in Tokyo, U.S. officials said that the two countries had narrowed their differences on market access issues related to agriculture and automobiles, two key sectors which have deadlocked the talks.

The 12-nation trade pact is seen as a key component of the Obama administration’s efforts to assert U.S. influence in Asia.

David Weil is responsible for enforcing federal protections such as the minimum wage and overtime. Weil, an economist at Boston University, has spent his whole career studying workplace issues.

A Boston University economist will become the nation’s Wage and Hour administrator when he’s sworn in today. David Weil will enforce laws, like the minimum wage and the 40-hour week. Even though Weil is a business professor, some business interests are expressing concern about his appointment.

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IRS employees who don’t pay their own taxes?

According to APM’s Marketplace, more than 1,000 IRS workers who failed to pay their taxes still received performance bonuses.
Andrew Biggs with the American Enterprise Institute generally favors performance bonuses for federal employees. But, Biggs says, “it is difficult to have employees working for the IRS who didn’t in fact pay their own taxes. That undermines the credibility of the agency as a whole.”

The IRS is considering a policy change. To listen to the whole story, click here.

Northeast’s Housing Market is Rebounding

Realtors are seeing reasons for optimism in the housing market. As reported by NPR on April 23, one historic home sale suggests the high end of the market is booming again — in Connecticut, at least, and the National Association of Realtors said the price of a typical home rose nearly 8 percent compared with last year. Read more, and listen to the report, here