Showing posts with label EU INFLATION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EU INFLATION. Show all posts

Saturday, April 1, 2023

POLITICO NIGHTLY: The economy is flashing positive signs. Is it time to exhale?

 

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BY BEN WHITE

With additional reporting from Ari Hawkins

Shoppers move past displays of designer clothes at the Neiman Marcus department store in NorthPark shopping center in Dallas.

Shoppers move past displays of designer clothes at the Neiman Marcus department store in NorthPark shopping center in Dallas. | LM Otero/AP Photo

BACK IN BUSINESS — You probably missed it in the Category Five hurricane of news slamming U.S. shores regarding the criminal indictment of a certain rambunctious former president.

But some decidedly positive news about the U.S. economy arrived today in the form of a very welcome dip in the rate of consumer inflation that could make it easier for the Federal Reserve to slow or even stop its campaign of inflating-fighting interest rate hikes before it drives the U.S. economy into recession.

The Commerce Department today reported that the Personal Consumption Expenditure index (PCE) rose 0.3 percent in February , excluding the volatile food and energy components. That was lower than the 0.4 percent Wall Street consensus and down from 0.5 percent in January.

On an annualized basis , this so-called “core PCE” measure — the Holy Grail of inflation numbers for the Fed — rose 4.6 percent in February, down a touch from 4.7 percent in January.

The headline inflation number, which includes food and energy, looked even better, dipping to 5.0 percent in February from 5.3 percent in January and hitting its lowest level since September of 2021.

These numbers remain well above the Fed’s target of around 2 percent annual inflation. But they suggest that all the hikes — which arguably helped drive the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and have wreaked havoc on the broader tech industry — are starting to really win the battle against a run of four-decade high inflation that followed the Covid pandemic.

That run, which created widespread economic misery and crushed President Joe Biden’s approval ratings, peaked last summer at over 7 percent as measured by core PCE and even higher as measured by the Consumer Price Index. It’s now pretty clearly receding, helping to drive solid rallies on Wall Street today. The Nasdaq closed out the first quarter up 16 percent and the S&P finished the first three months of the year up 7 percent, easing some of the pain for Americans now used to opening up dismal 401(k) updates.

The readings come after the Fed earlier this month declined to curtail its rate hiking campaign even in the wake of the dramatic collapse and federal rescue of SVB and Signature Bank. Those moves by the Fed implicitly guaranteed all deposits, even those over the insured limit of $250,000, at every FDIC-backed bank in the nation.

And it likely means the Fed could decide to hold off on another rate hike at its next meeting in May or at most issue one more quarter point hike. The central bank may then be able to start to cut rates late this year or early next assuming inflation continues to fall as the economy cools off.

That would once again put the fabled “soft-landing” back in play. In this best case scenario, the Fed defeats inflation without causing growth to turn negative for multiple quarters and unemployment to rise by a significant amount — the hallmarks of recession.

That is the chain of events that Biden and Democrats are fervently praying for to give the president a solid shot at winning a second term next November. His biggest selling points are a continued hot labor market and rising wages, especially among lower-income earners.

Should the Fed need to administer more beatings to the economy in the form of multiple additional rate hikes, recession would almost certainly ensue and Biden would be in deep trouble, even if he winds up running against an indicted (and perhaps convicted?) Donald Trump.

For the moment, the White House can roll into the weekend fairly confident the recent banking crisis is contained and the Fed is not likely to be wielding a sledge hammer to crush Biden’s hopes of becoming the oldest president to ever win a second term.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at bwhite@politico.com or on Twitter at @EconomyBen . Talk to him about his piece, or wish him a Happy Birthday (it’s today)!

 

OIN POLITICO ON 4/5 FOR THE 2023 RECAST POWER LIST: America’s demographics and power dynamics are changing — and POLITICO is recasting how it covers the intersection of race, identity, politics and policy. Join us for a conversation on the themes of the 2023 Recast Power List that will examine America’s decision-making tables, who gets to sit at them, and the challenges that still need to be addressed. REGISTER HERE .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is escorted out of his office today.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is escorted out of his office today. Bragg issued his first public response to Hill Republicans since news of former President Trump’s indictment, defending his office’s decision in a letter to lawmakers. | Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

— Trump plans to turn himself in: Trump is expected to turn himself over to local law enforcement on Tuesday. Plans are in motion for the unprecedented arraignment in New York, which is expected around 2:15 pm Tuesday according to a rough schedule shared by the campaign.

— Bragg defends Trump indictment against GOP attacks : Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg issued his first public response to Hill Republicans since news of the former president’s indictment , defending his office’s decision in a letter to lawmakers today. He rejected GOP accusations of political persecution as “baseless and inflammatory,” and pleaded with Capitol Hill Republicans to encourage calm. But Bragg’s office also accused them of engaging in “unlawful political interference.”

 IRS rules for electric cars unveiled after months of attacks: The Biden administration announced rules today that will make it harder for many electric vehicles to qualify for federal tax breaks — but could, over the long term, foster the growth of entire new U.S.-based industries built around clean energy. The proposed guidance from Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service aims to thread the needle between two of the climate law’s main goals — getting people to buy electric vehicles by making them more affordable, while ensuring that the U.S. and its closest trading partners reap the economic and security benefits.

— Biden-backed California rule pushes clean trucks : California will require more zero emission trucks on the roads after a key Biden administration approval , a move that is bound to transform the country’s truck market. The nation-leading Advanced Clean Trucks rule, first passed in 2020 and backed by the EPA today, sets a timeline for manufacturers to phase out most gas-powered heavy-duty vehicles by 2035. At least six states — Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, New Jersey, Washington and Oregon — have already moved to adopt the rule, meaning it will cover almost a quarter of the nation’s auto market.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

INDICTMENT EFFECT — The indictment of Trump is likely to deliver a temporary boost to him in the GOP primary —but at the expense of his standing among the broader electorate that will ultimately decide whether he returns to the White House, reports POLITICO’s Steven Shepard . Over the past month, as the prospect of criminal charges hung over Trump, the former president was actually increasing his national advantage over DeSantis, who hasn’t officially entered the race yet, among GOP voters. The indictment does little to threaten that lead, at least in the short term — as evidenced by DeSantis and the other declared or likely candidates decrying the charges on Thursday.

HOW IT’S PLAYING IN PA — Trump has divided Pennsylvania for years. The leaked news of his indictment was no different, reports the Philadelphia Inquirer . Pennsylvania Republican allies rallied behind him. Democrats applauded the prosecution as a sign of justice in motion. And both sides speculated what it could mean for his 2024 presidential campaign.

THREE QUESTIONS WITH… Jon McHenry , a Republican campaign pollster who is vice president of the North Star Opinion Research firm. 

What’s the most important state to watch in this early stage of the GOP primary?

Obviously I’m going to say New Hampshire. South Carolina is most like the Republican primary electorate now, but New Hampshire will be the first place that someone can really pop Trump, it will be a test of whether DeSantis can do well with an emphasis on retail politics, and the inclusion of undeclared voters in the GOP primary will be a test of some appeal in the general election, especially if Biden doesn’t receive a serious challenge.

What effect might the Trump/DeSantis relationship have on the primary?

A lot of this race could come down to how DeSantis deals with Trump. Trump seems to be obsessed with DeSantis, in a way that, honestly, should be beneath a former president of the United States. Does DeSantis deal with Trump in a way that makes him seem like the person with real credibility? Does DeSantis get in the sandbox with Trump and look like a baby? Can DeSantis pull off the moment in a debate like when Al Gore was pacing too close to W. and W. gives him a dismissive look?

Which Republican candidate would be most difficult — and easiest — for Biden to run against in the 2024 race? 

The easiest candidate for Biden is obviously Trump. He’s beaten him before, and will beat him again. The hardest candidate for Biden, I think, is Nikki Haley. She’s a better candidate than Biden, 30 years younger, and Biden will screw up talking to a woman every day of the week. He’s a mortal lock to say something sexist in one debate and irredeemably condescending in the next.

AROUND THE WORLD

AI CRACKDOWN — The Italian privacy regulator ordered a ban on ChatGPT today over alleged privacy violations , writes Clothilde Goujard .

The national data protection authority said it will immediately block and investigate OpenAI, the U.S. company behind the popular artificial intelligence tool, from processing the data of Italian users. The order is temporary until the company respects the EU’s landmark privacy law, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

Calls to suspend new ChatGPT releases and investigate its maker OpenAI over a range of risks for privacy, cybersecurity and disinformation are growing on both sides of the Atlantic. Elon Musk and dozens of AI experts this week called for a pause to updates of ChatGPT.

Consumer advocacy group BEUC also called on March 30 for EU and national authorities including data protection watchdogs to investigate ChatGPT.

INFLATION EASES — Eurozone inflation dropped at a record rate to 6.9 percent in March , driven by a sharp decline in energy prices compared to the same month last year, data released by the European statistics agencies showed today, writes Johanna Treeck .

While welcome news, the numbers will not have the European Central Bank in Frankfurt popping Champagne corks as they also showed so-called core inflation continued to rise. Core inflation measures filter out volatile food and energy components and are seen as a bellwether for future inflation trends.

 

GO INSIDE THE 2023 MILKEN INSTITUTE GLOBAL CONFERENCE:  POLITICO is proud to partner with the Milken Institute to produce a special edition "Global Insider" newsletter featuring exclusive coverage, insider nuggets and unparalleled insights from the 2023 Global Conference, which will convene leaders in health, finance, politics, philanthropy and entertainment from April 30-May 3. This year’s theme, Advancing a Thriving World , will challenge and inspire attendees to lean into building an optimistic coalition capable of tackling the issues and inequities we collectively face. Don’t miss a thing — subscribe today for a front row seat .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

$797,044

The total spending on Facebook, Google, YouTube and Instagram between Jan. 1 and March 25 among likely and confirmed 2024 Republican candidates. Online ad spending exploded in 2020 with over $2 billion spent across the presidential election amidst the pandemic. Early investments in 2024, while comparatively small, suggest campaigns will adopt similar strategies of reaching voters across digital platforms.

RADAR SWEEP

POWER PLAYERS — Who shaped the intersection of race, culture, politics and policy in America in 2022? It’s a diverse group — from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to the labor organizer Chris Smalls. POLITICO’s The Recast is back with profiles of the 40 power players who had an outsized impact on everything from passing laws to working to defeat health crises last year. None of them show any signs of slowing down. Check out the full list here .

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1990: Police in riot gear, backed up by police on horseback, drag resisting demonstrators to police vans after a peaceful march opposing the government's poll tax turned violent at Trafalger Square in London, England.

On this date in 1990: Police in riot gear, backed up by police on horseback, drag resisting demonstrators to police vans after a peaceful march opposing the government's poll tax turned violent at Trafalger Square in London, England. The Thatcher government replaced domestic rates — a way of raising capital for local councils (local government) — with a flat "Community Charge" or poll tax. The move was deeply unpopular, as some low income families ended up having to pay significantly more in taxes. More than 400 people were arrested, more than a 100 people injured, including police officers and police horses. In total, over 6,000 anti-tax demonstrations occurred across the country. | Gill Allen/AP Photo

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Friday, March 3, 2023

POLITICO NIGHGTLY: Where are all the missing workers?

 

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POLITICO Nightly logo

BY BEN WHITE

With additional reporting from Ari Hawkins

An overhead shot of commuters walking to work in New York City.

Commuters walk to work in New York City. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

NEVER COMING BACK — Never mind, for now, the high inflation, low growth, hot labor market conundrums our weird economy now presents. Here’s one of the great puzzles of our current vexing, Rubik’s Cube economy.

Just exactly how are the over 2 million or so workers who left the labor force during the worst of the Covid pandemic but have not returned, surviving?

A good chunk took early retirement. A slice built enough savings to last quite a while. Some face lingering “long Covid” and other persistent illnesses.

But significant numbers, according to a recent Bank of America study of its customers, are prime working age Gen Xers or Millennials. Exact figures are elusive. But how this group is still somehow paying the bills vexes economists, poses a big problem for the Federal Reserve and could tilt the economy toward or away from recession, thus shaping the contours of the 2024 campaign.

Nearly every time he speaks , Fed Chair Jerome Powell complains about how little success the central bank has had in bringing down wage inflation — which contributes to overall inflation — and emphasizes the need for more workers to return to the labor force to soak up millions of job openings and ease pressure on employers to keep paying more.

“Looking back, we can see that a significant and persistent labor supply shortfall opened up during the pandemic,” Powell said in a speech late last year. “A shortfall that appears unlikely to fully close anytime soon.” Powell will keep hiking interest rates, no matter how soft the underlying economy may become, if he can’t more forcefully push down wage inflation.

Workers who retired early are mostly never coming back . And absent better demographics or immigration liberalization (neither of which are happening), the prime age workers not in the labor force now better start coming back in bigger numbers or the Powell Fed may just smash down inflation by forcing the economy into a significant recession.

So where are these vanished workers? The answer, according to Bank of America research and anecdotal Nightly reporting, is not that all GenXers or Millennials have created lucrative, semi-off-the-books OnlyFans accounts. Some have certainly turned to forms of personal content creation and marketing. Many are doing gig economy work like child or pet care that don’t always show up on the books.

And many appear to have decided, for the moment at least, that returning to a job that (to use a GenX favorite) sucked — and required long, expensive commutes — is way worse than cutting expenses and perhaps moving someplace cheaper. And many others who worked in lower-end retail and restaurant-type jobs appear to be cobbling things together in other ways, rather than returning to similar employment.

While overall savings are dramatically down from their Covid-era highs , especially at the lower end of income earners, the BofA study suggests there is still some cushion. “Even for those with accounts under $50,000, the median bank balance is still up 50 percent from 2019,” Anna Zhou, author of the study, told Nightly. “So there is still some stimulus tailwind.”

That won’t last. Which means many low-end workers remain fairly likely to come back into the official labor force. It’s less clear for previously higher-earning GenXers and Millennials, many of whom seem keen to hold onto their lower-stress, lower-cost lifestyles.

Ellie Stevenson, a retiree in southern Connecticut, told Nightly she has at least a dozen prime working-age friends — mostly women, including some solo or primary breadwinners — who she does not expect to rejoin the workforce as it currently exists.

“Some of them took six-figure pay cuts because it just wasn’t the life they wanted to lead,” Stevenson said. “They had some savings, do some side work maybe, and just realized they don’t need to go out to eat all the time and can probably live some place cheaper.”

For the economy’s sake — and possibly Joe Biden’s re-election chances — it would be helpful if a big chunk of these missing workers decided they miss the more bougie lifestyle.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at bwhite@politico.com or on Twitter at @morningmoneyben .

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING : What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

 Biden won’t veto GOP effort to repeal D.C. criminal code: Biden told Senate Democrats today that he would not veto a GOP-backed bid to repeal changes to the D.C. criminal code , raising the stakes of an upcoming Senate vote, according to two people in the meeting. Biden’s disinterest in a veto threat leaves Republicans on track to roll back the new D.C. law with the support of at least one Senate Democrat when the chamber takes up the House-passed measure as soon as next week. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) has already said he will support the disapproval measure, and Senate Democrats can’t afford any more defections.

 DOJ rejects Trump claim of ‘categorical’ immunity from Jan. 6 lawsuits: The Justice Department urged a federal appeals court today to reject former President Donald Trump’s sweeping claim of immunity from a slew of civil suits stemming from his actions and statements on Jan. 6, 2021. It was a rare nod by the department to the limits of presidential immunity from lawsuits.

 FTC reaches deal with online therapy company over data misuse claims: The Federal Trade Commission reached a settlement with online therapy company BetterHelp over allegations it shared customers’ sensitive health data with third parties for advertising purposes, according to documents from the agency’s in-house court filed this morning and reviewed by POLITICO. The Teladoc-owned company has agreed to pay $7.8 million and change a variety of its business practices to resolve allegations that it shared consumer data with third parties despite telling customers it would not, according to the documents. The commission voted 4-0 to approve the settlement this morning.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

FOX NEWS IN SPANISH — Americano, a new Spanish-language conservative news and commentary platform, is seeking inroads with Latino voters in Nevada, which figures to be a key swing state in 2024. Its CEO told a Henderson audience that Univision, Telemundo and CNN en Español, which dominate the Spanish news landscape, are “Marxists” that push “leftist agenda against traditional values” and “brainwash” viewers .

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

THREE QUESTIONS WITH… Nightly spoke with Simon Rosenberg , a veteran of two Democratic presidential campaigns and a political strategist with NDN, also known as New Democrat Network, a soon-to-shut-down liberal advocacy and research group that he has led since the 1990s.

You were among the few political strategists who continuously expressed skepticism about the idea of a “red wave” in 2022. Are there any similar forces that you see shaping the 2024 election cycle that will affect Biden’s reelection campaign? 

Part of the reason that so many people got the election wrong in 2022, is that they overly discounted the ugliness of MAGA. In the 2018 and 2020 elections, there was an overwhelming vote against MAGA in those two elections, and the Republicans ran towards those politics in 2021, which I felt was a huge error. Usually when a party fails politically they run towards a new politics and not a politics that didn’t work.

Where Republicans have to be worried in 2024 is that the presidential battleground has now voted against MAGA in three consecutive elections. There’s muscle memory in now understanding the dangers of MAGA and the two leading Republican candidates right now, look and feel very MAGA.

For DeSantis and Trump, whoever of the two win the nomination, are going to be entering far more hostile terrain than DeSantis has faced in Florida for example, or Trump did in 2016, because there’s now been three elections in the battleground where Democrats have done well and Republicans haven’t.

Which Republican candidate would be easiest — and most difficult — for Biden to run against in the 2024 race?

I don’t think we have any way of knowing that right now. I think it depends on how the candidates in the Republican primary perform. Certainly, I think there’s still a lot of big questions about DeSantis and his ability at the national level. I think he’s run too far right in a way that it would be difficult to present himself as anything other than a MAGA candidate, which won’t be helpful in the battleground.

We’re favored to win the presidential race in 2024, because the basic dynamic in 2022, which is that basically, we’ve done a good enough job and they’re still a little but too crazy — could still be the basic dynamic in 2024. There will be a sense that, ‘hey, the Democrats, Joe Biden, did a good job. You know, why get rid of them?’ And then you look at the Republicans and they still feel a little bit too crazy. That’s the likely scenario today, but of course, that could change.

If Biden doesn’t run for a second term, will the party immediately coalesce around Vice President Kamala Harris or will there be a contested nomination?

If Joe Biden doesn’t run, Vice President Harris will be the front runner for the Democratic nomination, but there will be a contested and vigorous primary.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

IRAN POISONINGS — Iranian authorities announced this week they are investigating the poisoning of hundreds of schoolgirls in cities across the country, incidents that have underscored concerns that Islamic extremists are escalating their long-standing campaign against female education, Ari Hawkins reports for Nightly.

Earlier this week, dozens of students located in Pardis, on the outskirts of Tehran, were hospitalized after facing “mild poisoning,” according to a report from the semiofficial Tasnim news agency . The incident is the latest in a spate of attacks reported in up to 15 cities across Iran since November, a member of Iran’s parliament, Abu Abdulali Rahimi Mozafari, was quotted saying .

On Wednesday, the Islamic regime’s semi-official Mehr News reported that “nearly 900 students” from across the country have been poisoned so far. Zahra Sheikhi, a spokeswoman for Iran’s Health Commission, said 800 students experienced poisoning in the holy city of Qom, Iran, over the last few months.

While Iranian security officials have not announced a suspected motive, Younes Panahi, Iran’s deputy education minister, told reporters on Wednesday that “After the poisoning of several students in [the city of] Qom … it was found that some people wanted all schools, especially girls’ schools, to be closed.”

The investigation of poisonings represents an about-face from the regime, which for months downplayed reports. Mohammad Habibi, spokesman for the Iranian Teachers Trade Association, linked the poisonings to ongoing protests against the Islamic regime’s treatment of women.

“The poisoning of students at girls’ schools, which have been confirmed as deliberate acts, was neither arbitrary nor accidental,” Habibi tweeted . He said the incidents were part of a governmental campaign “to increase public fear” in the wake of ongoing protests.

The targeting of schoolgirls comes after more than five months of protests that erupted in September over the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was allegedly killed in police custody for not adhering to the country’s strict Islamic dress code.

“Women are now the majority of people earning bachelor’s degrees and universities in Iran, including in science and technology fields,” said Kelly J. Shannon, executive director for the Center for Peace, Justice and Human Rights at Florida Atlantic University. “So to attack school children, especially mostly girls, right now, is pretty unprecedented.”

NIGHTLY NUMBER

8.5 percent

The measure of annual inflation in the eurozone in February , a higher number than economists expected and only a small dip from January’s 8.6 percent annual inflation number. The figures from Europe reinforce a belief from European and American economists that persistent inflation could cause further rate hikes and raise the likelihood of recession.

RADAR SWEEP

LIAR, LIAR — In an excerpt of his new book “Tremors in the Blood: Murder, Obsession, and the Birth of the Lie Detector,” Amit Katwala explores the history of the polygraph test for WIRED. Katwala takes us through the lie detector’s first case: a burglary in a women’s dorm in Berkeley in 1921. A rookie detective named John Larson, who had figured out how to employ the lie detector after reading about similar devices, was excited to try it out. How it was used, though, immediately exposed its flaws; flaws that would continue to be apparent as the lie detector was used more widely. Read the story of burglary, abuse, romance and more .

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1962: Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors holds a sign reading

On this date in 1962: Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors after scoring an NBA-record 100 points as the Warriors defeated the New York Knicks 169-147. The record has yet to be broken; Kobe Bryant came closest with 81 in 2006. | Paul Vathis/AP Photo

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Trump rips his own party in wild Memorial Day screed

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