Signals strong third quarter                                                                        
6

Aug. 12, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Deflation averted for now as consumer and producer prices recover in July, signal strong third quarter
The Producer Price Index and Consumer Price Index have both recovered dramatically in the month of July, growing 0.6 percent amid increased demand for oil and gasoline, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). About one-third of the producer price jump and one-quarter of the consumer price increase, BLS says, comes from increased gasoline consumption and higher fuel prices as millions of Americans get back to work and are hitting the roads. In the past three months alone, more than 10 million jobs have been restored as states are slowly reopening. Oil, which dropped below zero in April, has now safely recovered to over $41 a barrel and crude oil inventories are finally slowly clearing out after reaching record highs earlier this year. After the second quarter set a record on the downside as the Gross Domestic Product contracted 32.9 percent, the rebound both in producer prices and in consumer prices, which also grew 0.6 percent in June, coupled with the jobs gains, promises that the third quarter will set a record on the upside. Further fueling the economic recovery, the U.S. dollar relative to foreign trade partner currencies has finally corrected off of record highs after financial institutions and central banks had flooded into U.S. treasuries and dollar-denominated assets amid the flight to safety this spring and early summer. All of which bodes extremely well for the third quarter that began in July. Deflation is averted — for now.

Video: Portland, Oreg. and other liberal cities refuse to use National Guard to quell anti-police rebellion
Liberal city mayors and state governors are refusing to call in the National Guard to restore civil order amid ongoing riots as the American people across party lines are blaming them for allowing the violence to grow by limiting police response. What are they thinking?

Biden picks San Francisco Bay area radical for VP
Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning: “Joe Biden’s choice of Kamala Harris to be his successor in the highest office of the land is a perfect example of someone failing up.  Harris has proven herself to be little more than a nasty partisan who only appeals to far-left coast socialists.  Her performance during the confirmation hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh revealed the presumptive Democratic Party nominee for Vice President to be little more than a wild eyed radical devoted to the politics of personal destruction, and just as Democrats overwhelmingly rejected her in their primary for president, Americans as a whole will reject her as the next in line to the presidency. In picking Harris, Joe Biden chose the Antifa wing of the Democratic Party, making the stark differences between the two visions for America crystal clear.”

Foxnews.com: Outgoing Seattle police chief says resignation is not about money, but 'lack of respect' for officers
“Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best on Tuesday announced her resignation, saying that she was not leaving because of pay cuts to her department, but because of the ‘lack of respect’ toward her fellow officers. Best’s resignation comes amid the City Council’s decision to reduce the department by as many as 100 officers through layoffs and attrition. In response to a reporter who asked if her decision was motivated by protesters who appeared at her home earlier this month, or the City Council’s decision, Best said it ‘is not about the money, and it certainly isn’t about the demonstrators.’ ‘I mean, be real, I have a lot thicker skin than that,’ Best said. ‘It really is about the overarching lack of respect for the officers, the men and women who work so hard, day in and day out.’


 

Deflation averted for now as consumer and producer prices recover in July, signal strong third quarter

6

 

By Robert Romano

The Producer Price Index and Consumer Price Index have both recovered dramatically in the month of July, each growing 0.6 percent amid increased demand for oil and gasoline, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

About one-third of the producer price jump and one-quarter of the consumer price increase, BLS says, comes from increased gasoline consumption and higher fuel prices as millions of Americans get back to work and are hitting the roads. In the past three months alone, more than 10 million jobs have been restored as states are slowly reopening.

Oil, which dropped below zero in April, has now safely recovered to over $42 a barrel and crude oil inventories are finally slowly clearing out after reaching record highs earlier this year.

All of which bodes extremely well for the third quarter that began in July. Deflation is averted—for now.

After the second quarter set a record on the downside as the Gross Domestic Product contracted 32.9 percent, the rebound both in producer prices and in consumer prices, which also grew 0.6 percent in June, coupled with the jobs gains, promises that the third quarter will set a record on the upside.

Further fueling the economic recovery, the U.S. dollar relative to foreign trade partner currencies has finally corrected off of record highs after financial institutions and central banks had flooded into U.S. treasuries and dollar-denominated assets amid the flight to safety this spring and early summer. With the dollar weakening slightly, that is putting upward pressure on prices.

While interest rates including for treasuries remain low, the rate of new treasuries creation has slowed the pace of purchases, only growing 0.01 percent in July after skyrocketing 2.8 percent in June and 3.1 percent in May, according to U.S. Treasury data, as the national debt stabilizes — for now — around the $26.5 trillion level.

The driving factor of course for the economic turnaround are the number of cases of the China-originated COVID-19 pandemic stabilizing after a temporary spike last month as states were reopening.

As the worst of the virus is past us after the surge of cases in the spring, and states slowly reopen, Americans are regaining confidence in the economy and resuming work and purchases.

Politically, that undoubtedly should be good news for President Donald Trump, who during the worst of the virus in the spring confidently predicted a rapid recovery. He was right.

But it’s a delicate situation, looking forward into the fall when the cold and flu season returns. At that point, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects daily new cases will begin rising again in October and continue rising into the winter months.

If an effective vaccine or a cure are not available by then, one might anticipate, especially if states cannot find a way to safely reopen, they will most certainly begin closing up shop again especially after the election.  

That in turn will renew the contraction in labor markets and the reactive, countercyclical Congressional spending cycle to shore up small and large businesses, extend unemployment ever further and send more checks to the American people.

A lot depends, especially as the autumn wears on, on whether schools and state economies can return to some semblance of normalcy, or if we’re in for another several months behind closed doors.

For now, though, the data on both prices and job creation rebounding strongly shows that a classic, V-shaped economic recovery is fully underway. The only thing that might stop it now is the virus. Stay tuned.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.

To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/08/deflation-averted-for-now-as-consumer-and-producer-prices-recover-in-july-signal-strong-third-quarter/


Video: Portland, Oreg. and other liberal cities refuse to use National Guard to quell anti-police rebellion

6

 

To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-GdcceBvgQ


algpressreleases.PNG

Biden picks San Francisco Bay area radical for VP

Aug. 11, 2020, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement responding to former Vice President Joe Biden’s choice for running in Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.):

“Joe Biden’s choice of Kamala Harris to be his successor in the highest office of the land is a perfect example of someone failing up.  Harris has proven herself to be little more than a nasty partisan who only appeals to far-left coast socialists.  Her performance during the confirmation hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh revealed the presumptive Democratic Party nominee for Vice President to be little more than a wild eyed radical devoted to the politics of personal destruction, and just as Democrats overwhelmingly rejected her in their primary for president, Americans as a whole will reject her as the next in line to the presidency. In picking Harris, Joe Biden chose the Antifa wing of the Democratic Party, making the stark differences between the two visions for America crystal clear.”

To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/08/biden-picks-san-francisco-bay-area-radical-for-vp/


toohotnottonote5.PNG

ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured report from FoxNews.com, Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best resigned amid a “lack of respect” toward her fellow officers:

foxnews_thumb.PNG

Outgoing Seattle police chief says resignation is not about money, but 'lack of respect' for officers

By Bradford Betz

Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best on Tuesday announced her resignation, saying that she was not leaving because of pay cuts to her department, but because of the “lack of respect” toward her fellow officers.

Best’s resignation comes amid the City Council’s decision to reduce the department by as many as 100 officers through layoffs and attrition.

In response to a reporter who asked if her decision was motivated by protesters who appeared at her home earlier this month, or the City Council’s decision, Best said it "is not about the money, and it certainly isn’t about the demonstrators."

“I mean, be real, I have a lot thicker skin than that," Best said. "It really is about the overarching lack of respect for the officers, the men and women who work so hard, day in and day out."

She added: “The idea that we’ve worked so incredibly hard to make sure our department was diverse, that (it) reflects the community that we serve, to just turn that all on a dime and hack it off, without having a plan in place to move forward, is highly distressful for me.”

Best, the city's first Black police chief, said in a letter to the department that her retirement will be effective Sept. 2.

"I am confident the department will make it through these difficult times," Best said in the letter. "You truly are the best police department in the country, and please trust me when I say, the vast majority of people in Seattle support you and appreciate you.”

In an email to police, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said she accepted Best's decision "with a very heavy heart."

"I regret deeply that she concluded that the best way to serve the city and help the department was a change in leadership, in the hope that would change the dynamics to move forward with the City Council," Durkan wrote.

A military veteran, Best joined the department in 1992 and had worked in a wide variety of roles, including patrol, media relations, narcotics, operations, and as deputy chief. The mayor picked Best in July of 2018 to lead the department. She had been serving as interim chief.

Council members had approved the cuts Monday. The vote came after a summer of nationwide protests against police after the death of George Floyd while in police custody in Minneapolis.

Measures that would cut less than $4 million of the department's $400 million annual budget this year passed out of committee unanimously last week. The City Council also cut Best's roughly $285,000 annual salary and the pay of other top police leaders.

The cuts were widely supported by demonstrators who marched in the city but strongly opposed by Durkan and Best, who urged the council to slow down its discussions about police budgets. They said any layoffs would disproportionately target newer officers, often hired from Black and Brown communities, and would inevitably lead to lawsuits.

“I really think that we needed to have a plan moving forward,” Best said at Tuesday’s news conference. “It was highly disappointing to not see that.”

Durkan has appointed Deputy Chief Adrian Diaz as the interim chief. She told reporters there are no immediate plans to find a permanent replacement for Best.

To view online: https://www.foxnews.com/us/seattle-police-chief-carmen-best-resignation-lack-of-respect

 




This email is intended for [email protected].
Update your preferences or Unsubscribe