There’s good news and bad news in today’s weekly update of initial jobless claims. The good news is that new filings for jobless benefits fell last week, albeit by a slim 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 368,000. That’s also the bad news. A more convincing drop–ideally to new post-recession lows–is what’s needed to boost confidence. Instead, we seem to be stuck in neutral, and so there’s no resolution yet for the main question weighing on the economic outlook: Are the last two months of weak growth in private payrolls signs of deeper troubles for the U.S. economy?
Daily Archives: May 10, 2012
Does History Support NGDP Targeting Now?
The debate about targeting a higher rate of growth for nominal gross domestic product (NGDP) keeps the blogosphere humming, but the discussion doesn’t mean much if Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke doesn’t embrace the idea. Don’t hold your breath. Last month he said the idea is “reckless.” That’s monetary-speak for: Don’t even think about it. But if NGDP targeting is considered a radical notion by some, including those at the pinnacle of monetary power, the empirical record suggests otherwise.