Showing posts with label Tommy Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tommy Thompson. Show all posts

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The Latest News on 2010

Tommy Thompson is out in Wisconsin, likely giving a big edge back to the DEMs to retain that seat. Other than that, not a lot of other good news for the DEMs. Here are the latest updates.

Rating Changes
Wisconsin - with Thompson out of the race, there is no GOP candidate that is polling close to incumbent Russ Feingold. This races moves from a Toss-Up to a Likely Democratic Hold.

Kentucky - Grayson is up 20 points in the latest poll. This one looks out of reach for the DEMs for now, in spite of the taint of Jim Bunning on the seat. Moves from Lean GOP Hold to Likely GOP Hold.

New Hampshire - a close call here, but with Ayotte up by 7, 8 and 15 in the latest three polls, with the 15 point spread being the most recent, it feels decisive enough to move from Lean GOP Hold to Likely GOP Hold.

Arizona - I had been expecting to move this one right for some time, but McCain had been polling in a very lackluster fashion through the winter. The latest poll shows him up by 19 points on Glassman. Moves from Lean GOP Hold to Likely GOP Hold.

Ohio - back in play - Fisher leads by 4% in 2 of the last 3 polls, Brunner by 5% in the other. The race switches from Lean GOP Hold to Toss-Up.

New Polls, No Ratings Change
Arkansas - this may move right soon, but not quite yet. The latest Rasmussen Poll shows Blanche Lincoln down by as much as 15 points against potential GOP challengers, but other polls show the race in the mid-to-high single digits. It stays a Lean GOP Pick-Up...for now.

Colorado - Bennett is trailing by 4 to 5 points against potential GOP challengers in 3 new polls. Still a Lean GOP Pick-Up.

Pennsylvania - Toomey is up 5 to 8 points in a new batch of polls. Stays a Lean GOP Pick-Up.

Nevada - another one that has been consistently straddling the lean/likely edge. Harry Reid is down by 7 to 15 points in the latest set of polling. I'll leave it a Likely GOP Pick-Up for now, but it could go left if there are some more single digit polls.

Washington - Patty Murray leads by only 2 to 8 points against GOP comers in a Rasmussen poll. If one additional poll confirms these numbers, I will move the rating right, but for now it stays a Likely DEM Hold.

Overall Senate Ratings
Projected Democratic Holds (9)
Safe Holds (4)
Connecticut, Maryland, New York (Schumer), Vermont

Likely Holds (4)
Washington, Hawaii, Oregon, Wisconsin

Lean Hold (1)
California

Potential Democratic Pick-Ups (1)

Toss-Ups (1)
Ohio

Potential GOP Pick-Ups (9)
Safe GOP Pick-UP (1)
North Dakota

Likely GOP Pick-Up (1)
Nevada

Lean GOP Pick-Up (5)
Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, Colorado, Pennsylvania

Toss-Ups - DEM Controlled (2)
Illinois, New York (Gillebrand)

Projected GOP Holds (17)
Safe Holds (8)
Louisiana, Iowa, South Dakota, Alabama, Idaho, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah

Likely Holds (8)
New Hampshire, Kentucky, Arizona, North Carolina, Georgia, Alaska, Kansas, Florida

Lean Holds (1)
Missouri

Net Projection: GOP Pick-Up of 6 to 9 Seats
(10 seats needed for control of the Senate)

In The House...
Our average of averages shows generic polling for the GOP is holding steady at +3.9%. This would project:

GOP Pick-Up of 44 Seats


So by my count, the GOP would narrowly take the House but narrowly fail to take the Senate if the election were held today.

While there is week-to-week variation, it is undoubtedly looking bad for the Democrats in November. They are hoping on the economic recovery to boost their prospects. The economy HAS improved greatly, as we have documented extensively in this space. But it doesn't matter until employment improves and people THINK the economy is better for THEM. Just ask George Herbert-Walker Bush how much an early-stage recovery helps the incumbent party's prospects.

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Saturday, January 30, 2010

5.7% Economic Growth and What It Means, Time to Watch Wisconsin?

The Recovery Becomes Official, What's Next?
The Bureau of Economic Analysis on Friday released it's quarterly report on the performance of the United States Gross Domestic product, which included the preliminary estimate of economic growth in the 4th quarter of 2009. The US Economy grew at an annualized rate of 5.7% in the 4th quarter of 2009, the fastest rate in over 6 years. This, following the revised 2.2% growth rate for the third quarter of 2009, marks two consecutive quarters of positive economic growth. For all intents and purposes, we can declare that the "Great Recession" ended in the summer or fall of 2009, although an official pronouncement won't be made until long after the fact.

So what exactly does this mean and how does this jive with the current 10.0% unemployment rate and the even more scary "underemployment rate" which counts those who are unemployed, those who are no longer classified as unemployment because they have given up looking for work and those who are working part-time but are seeking full-time work, of 18.3%?

First, let's take a step back and remember what these numbers mean.

The Gross Domestic Product of the United States is the value of all goods and services produced in the United States within a year. This is a very important bottom-line economic number as the the value of all the goods and services produced directly correlates to the standard of living people have as all goods and services produced here are either consumed here or exported, with the value of the exports used to buy other goods. A very good metric for the overall standard of living in a country is its Per Capita GDP, that is the Gross Domestic Product divided by the population. This is how many goods and services the average person can expect to receive. This explanation is a little over-simplified, but generally true.

The US population is not static. It is growing at a rate of about 2% per year. Therefore, the GDP has to grow at a rate of 2% per year just to maintain the existing standard of living. When growth falls below 2%, even if it does not go negative, living standards decline. When it exceeds 2%, living standards increase.

The chart below shows the quarterly GDP growth rates since 2007. The green line is the actual GDP growth rate. The blue line is the "gap to 2%", that is the amount by which the standard of living in the United States is below where it was before the recession started.



There are two key lessons that I believe that you can glean from this graph.

(1) Economic performance under President Obama has been remarkable good
It's an odd thing to say with unemployment extremely high, but if you look at the growth curve, the economy was in utter free-fall in the 4th quarter of 2008 (before the President took office) and in the 1st quarter of 2009 (after the President took office, but before any reasonable impact from his economic policies could take effect.)

Of course, giving him full credit for the recovery would be silly. The actions to stabilize the financial system taken by the Bush administration in its last days, as lacking as they may have been in terms of proper accountability, was critical in preventing an even greater slide. The natural economic cycle obviously also plays into this -- economies go up and down to a certain extent irrespective of government policy. The Fed has also been critical, slashing interest rates to their lowest levels ever and providing large amounts of liquidity by taking on a large balance sheet.

Still, it's hard to deny the impact of President Obama's policies. Cash for Clunkers and the First Time Homebuyer credit spurred auto sales and arrested the free fall of home prices. Tax credits stabilized consumer spending. Infrastructure spending spurred construction employment, albeit not at a fast enough pace.

The bottom line is, in just three quarters, the rate of economic growth went from a pace of 6.4% contraction to a pace of 5.7% growth, over a 12% swing.

(2) How Far We Still Have to Go
If you look at the gap to 2% growth, the economy is still 5.8% smaller than it needs to be just to restore the standard of living prior to the recession. That may not sound like a lot relative to a 5.7% growth rate, but it is. Let me explain.

Keep in mind that going forward, the economy will continue to have to grow at 2% just to hold its ground, so a year of 5.8% growth wouldn't restore the standard, it would require a year of 7.8% growth, 5.8% to fill the hole and 2.0% to account for population growth. Nobody thinks 7.8% growth is going to happen.

So, based on more realistic scenarios, how long before we get back to where we were?
At 5% growth, it would take 2 years to get back to where we were at the start of the recession -- in other words we wouldn't be back to where we were until the end of 2011.

At 4% growth, it would take 3 years, or the end of 2012.

At 3% growth, it would take 5.75 years, or the fall of 2015.

And the 5.7% growth number includes a lot of inventory recovery - businesses restocking inventories following holding them at historic lows during the recession, growth that is not repeatable. 4% is probably a pretty rosy scenario. Which means that we are going to see elevated unemployment for some time to come.

So, in the end, the news is good, but we have a long way to go. The Fed will have to balance growth with controlling inflation and will ultimately need to increase interest rates to more normal levels if economic growth continues. There is still anxiety and depressed consumer spending thanks to high unemployment. But it's hard not to feel a lot better than we did a year or nine months ago.

Stimulus Spending and the Proposed "Jobs Bill"
The latest government report shows that stimulus money continues to slowly go out the door. The latest figures:
Tax Cuts: $92.8 billion spent out of $288 billion (32.2%)
Spending: $195.6 billion spent out of $499 billion (39.2%)
Total: $288.4 billion spent out of $787 billion (36.6%)

Given that 63.4% of the stimulus money remains unspent, why is President Obama saying that a "jobs bill", also known to those of us paying attention, as another stimulus bill, should be the top priority of congress this year?

Clearly part of it is political, the President is trying to pivot to an economic focus after the bloody fight over health care sapped his public approval. This is understandable. The Democrats want to be seen as doing something with people still hurting under the scourge of unemployment.

But authorizing more spending may not be the best course to chart. The best course is probably to focus on effectively deploying the almost half a trillion dollar already available under the stimulus package, working to close out TARP and collect remaining outstanding loans to the financial services industry, chart a course back to private enterprise for GM, which may well earn a profit this year and chart a plan to deficit reduction that will prevent future economic growth from being impaired by massive amounts of investment capital being absorbed through government bonds.

That work isn't as sexy, but is probably what is needed. Hopefully that will all happen in the background. But we are probably going to get at least a token jobs bill in the meantime.

Feingold at Risk?
A theoretical Rasmussen poll matching incumbent Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) against popular former Republican Governor and former Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson, shows Thompson leading Feingold by 3%. This is a theoretical poll as Thompson has not indicated that he is going to run. Still, it is a worrisome number for Feingold, as it shows that he IS vulnerable this November. It is enough to move Wisconsin from a Likely Democratic Hold to a Lean Democratic Hold.

Other polls released this week showed the GOP continuing to lead in North Carolina and the DEM's continuing to lead in California, but neither was significant enough to move the rating of the races, which were both already listed as leaning in those respective directions.

The GOP is slowly chipping into one Democratic seat after another. Is this just a low point for the DEM's and will the ultimately recover or hold on and win Wisconsin, Indiana, California, New York, Pennsylvania, etc.? Or is this the start of a GOP November rout, where the GOP finds an improbable way to secure 10 seats and control of the Senate.

No one can know at this point. We'll see what the polls do in the next few days in the aftermath of the State of the Union speech.

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