Posted inEconomic Policy

NYT Is Anxious to Tout Bad News About Europe

That is what the headline of an article on new economic data told readers. The headline is: “Unemployment and Inflation Rise in Europe.” The data showed that unemployment increased from 9.9 percent in January to 10.0 percent in February. This increase is not statistically significant. It is also the same unemployment rate that had originally […]

Posted inEconomic Policy

Surging Homes Sales? Seasonal Adjustments, Please

The NYT told readers that home sales are surging in advance of the April 30th expiration of the extended first-time homebuyers tax credit. While it is reasonable to expect somewhat of a surge, there is actually very little evidence of one this far. The Mortgage Bankers Association mortgage applications index has been running substantially below […]

Posted inEconomic Policy

Beat the Press Coming Home to CEPR’s Website

On April 1, 1996, way before anyone heard of a blog, Beat the Press began as a weekly commentary called “Reading Between the Lines” on the Economic Policy Institute’s website. I started writing it because I felt that major media outlets were often obscuring rather than explaining major economic issues. Since then BTP has gone […]

Posted inEconomic Policy

Post Uses Xenophobia to Advance Its Budget Agenda

The Post once again used xenophobia to push its budget agenda as editorial page editor Fred Hiatt darkly warned readers that as a result of projected future budget deficits: “the United States would be increasingly at the mercy of China, Saudi Arabia and other lenders.” Of course, as every econ 101 student knows, budget deficits […]

Posted inEconomic Policy

The New York Times Could Not Find Any Economists Who Saw the Housing Bubble to Talk About Financial Regulation

The NYT magazine featured a lengthy piece on financial regulation. Remarkably, it did not quote or cite a single person who saw the housing bubble and recognized its danger. The failure to include the views of someone who actually understood the economy makes the issues surrounding regulation appear far more complex than they are. There […]

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