According to the New York Times reporting on wages at Delphi, the autoworkers seem to be gaining rapidly. Earlier the NYT had reported that compensation for autoworkers at Delphi averaged $65 an hour. They never gave a detailed breakdown of this figure, but they did report that wages were $28 an hour. If the wage […]
Dean Baker
Dean Baker is senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books, including Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer. Read more about Dean.
Labor Costs and the Fed
Both the NYT and Post had articles this morning that warned about the 4.9 percent annual rate of growth in unit labor costs in the second quarter reported yesterday, and indicated that this could cause the Fed to raise interest rates further to combat inflation. Whatever the Fed does on interest rates, letďż˝s hope that […]
Medicare Drugs and What Politicians “Think”
There should be a simple rule written in huge neon signs in every newsroom: ďż˝You donďż˝t know what politicians ďż˝think.�� The reason is simple. Politicians do not generally say what they think. They say what will advance their political careers. This is their job. (That is a bi-partisan comment.) If a reporter believes that she […]
The Cost of Protectionism in Russia: Counterfeit Drugs
The NYT had an interesting piece on counterfeit drugs in Russia. It reports that counterfeits may account for as much as 30 percent of total sales. This is what happens when the government creates an artificial monopoly with patent protection. Just as the Soviet Union couldn’t prevent black market sales of blue jeans, Russia can’t […]
Tim Russert Bashes Social Security, Yet Again
If Social Security was a private corporation, Tim Russert would be unemployed and NBC would be out of business. (When you misrepresent the financial state of a private business in the way that Russert misrepresents the financial state of Social Security, you get sued for libel.) Note how the fact that Social Security, Medicare, and […]
From the NYT�s Europe Bashing Desk
The NYTďż˝s Europe-bashing desk pulled out the stops today in going after Germany. Readers would have learned about Germanyďż˝s ďż˝chronic double-digit inflation.ďż˝ This surely would be news to most readers, since the OECD puts Germanyďż˝s inflation rate over the last year at just over 2.0 percent. Perhaps the article meant to say ďż˝chronic double-digit unemployment.ďż˝ […]
“I’m Hoping For Prices to Drop”
No, that’s not me rooting for a quick end to the housing bubble; those are the words of David Lereah, the chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, as quoted in the Wall Street Journal. Yes, this is the same economist who until recently was assuring buyers that house prices will never fall. The […]
The Last Throes of the Housing Bubble
The standard story of financial bubbles has that financing gets progressively more tenuous as the bubble expands. BusinessWeek has a nice piece about the latest and most pernicious financial innovation of the current bubble, the option ARM. It’s too bad that no one in a position of authority was awake before the bubble grew to […]
Monthly Wage Growth Data: Hours of Pain
Regular users of government data (like reporters) should know its limitations. Many of the series are highly erratic, meaning that any individual number contains a considerable amount of error and a limited amount of information. The hourly wage data very much fit this bill. In the real world, hourly wage growth doesnďż˝t change very much […]
The Washington Post Redefines “Fast”
The Post has an article headlined “Fast-Growing Countries to Gain More Clout at IMF.” The list of countries is China, South Korea, Turkey, and Mexico. The first three countries can reasonably be described as “fast-growing,” but not Mexico. Mexico’s per capita GDP growth has averaged just 1 percent annually for the last decade, a slow […]

