Michigan Development Bank

Because Jobs Matter

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Welcome to Jobs4Michigan.org

Economic Recovery

E-mail Print PDF


This Is Not a Recovery

Published: August 26, 2010

Op-Ed Columnist
  The New York Times -Paul Krugman

But we can safely predict what he and other officials will say about where we are right now: that the economy is continuing to recover, albeit more slowly than they would like. Unfortunately, that's not true: this isn't a recovery, in any sense that matters. And policy makers should be doing everything they can to change that fact.

The small sliver of truth in claims of continuing recovery is the fact that G.D.P. is still rising: we're not in a classic recession, in which everything goes down. But so what?

Read more...
 

Do we need a Second Stimulus

E-mail Print PDF

Why We Need a Second Stimulus
By LAURA TYSON -New York Times
Published: August 28, 2010

OUR national debate about fiscal policy has become skewed, with far too much focus on the deficit and far too little on unemployment. There is too much worry about the size of government, and too little appreciation for how stimulus spending has helped stabilize the economy and how more of the right kind of government spending could boost job creation and economic growth. By focusing on the wrong things, we are in serious danger of failing to do the right things to help the economy recover from its worst labor market crisis since the Great Depression.

The primary cause of the labor market crisis is a collapse in private demand - the same problem that bedeviled the economy in the 1930s.

Read more...
 

The value of investing in local businesses

E-mail Print PDF

Germany is eating our lunch by investing in small enterprises.

Germany has increased its edge in world-class manufacturing even as we have squandered ours because its model of capitalism is superior to our own. For one thing, its financial sector serves the larger economy, not just itself. The typical German company has a long-term relationship with a single bank -- and for the smaller manufacturers that are the backbone of the German economy, those relationships are likely with one of Germany's 431 savings banks, each of them a local institution with a municipally appointed board, that shun capital markets and invest their depositors' savings in upgrading local enterprises. By American banking standards, the savings banks are incredibly dull. But they didn't lose money in the financial panic of 2008 and have financed an industrial sector that makes ours look anemic by comparison.

So even as Germany and China have been busily building, and selling us, high-speed trains, photovoltaic cells and lithium-ion batteries, we've spent the past decade, at the direction of our CEOs and bankers, shuttering 50,000 factories and springing credit-default swaps on an unsuspecting world. That's not to say our CEOs and bankers are conscious agents of foreign powers. But given what they've done to America, they might as well have been..... Read More

From Washington Post  Thursday, July 1, 2010

 By Harold Meyerson

 

 

Japan’s economy is in a trap

E-mail Print PDF

Japan Plans New Steps to Curb Yen

By HIROKO TABUCHI
Published: August 30, 2010

TOKYO - Japan promised a host of measures on Monday in a bid to ignite its faltering economy and temper a punishingly strong yen.

Toru Hanai/Reuters
Masaaki Shirakawa, governor of the Bank of Japan, warned of "drawbacks" to further cuts in already-low interest rates.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan proposed new stimulus steps, while the Bank of Japan, under pressure from the government, further eased its already easy monetary policy.

But analysts called the measures too timid in the face of the problems plaguing Japan's export-oriented economy. A yen that has paradoxically surged to 15-year highs despite weaknesses in the country's economy, coupled with the damaging phenomenon of falling prices known as deflation, continues to hinder hopes of a strong recovery, analysts said.

The proposals, however, had little effect on the currency markets, where the yen strengthened again Monday. The yen rose to 84.67 against the dollar.

"There seems to be a sense of fatalism. The B.O.J. continues to play the same old game of making incremental, but ultimately meaningless, policy changes in response to political pressure," said Richard Jerram, economist for Japan at the global investment bank, Macquarie.

Read more...
 

Testimony of Paul Brown, Michigan Economic Development Corp in DC

E-mail Print PDF

Testimony Presented Before U.S. House Banking Committee

The efforts of this administration and this congress over the last year can only be described as having saved our economy.  The bill you are considering today is not designed to save our economy, but to save our economy as we know it.  This country's true economic strength has always been in its small businesses, especially small manufacturers.  The vast majority of workers are employed by small and medium size firms.  We have to rely on small businesses for job growth if we hope to quickly recover the millions of jobs lost during the Great Recession.  This administration and Congress had to save Wall Street.  Now we should save Main Street.

 

Read more...
 
  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »


Page 1 of 2

Main Menu


News

How China Impacts our jobs

Time to rethink U.S.-China trade relations

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The U.S. government and the business community need to rethink our China strategy and retool our trade bureaucracy to face the tangled web of emerging Chinese policies. Otherwise, American technology companies could be coerced to plant the seeds of their destruction in the fertile China market. To read more