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Economic Data Close the Books and Open a New One

The torch passes from one administration to another. How should the new administration be judged for its economics? The economy has a lot of ground to make up and population demographics make its urgency all the greater. The louder one complains on the campaign trail, the more responsible you have to be. What's the real story behind the complaints about trade fairness? It may not be about trade at all, but about what happens after the deal is done.

Monday, January 23, 2017

The process of closing the economic statistics books on the Obama administration begins later this week. There will always be revisions, but those will be based on the many data from the fourth quarter of 2016. Thursday is the trade balance data (more on that later) and then the first official GDP report for final quarter of the year. At the time of this writing the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow estimate for Q4 stands at +2.8%.

It's the fourth quarter of 2016 on which the new administration will be judged, but it should not be by that alone. It should be in combination with the levels of the last recession, which started December 2007. Many key economic variables never recovered, which means that the recession and its incomplete recovery now spans parts of three administrations.

The Federal Reserve Industrial Production Index peaked in November 2014 and has been in general decline since. On a year-to-year percentage basis, December 2016 was the first time this index was positive (+0.5%) in 15 months.


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About Dr. Joe Webb

Dr. Joe Webb is one of the graphic arts industry's best-known consultants, forecasters, and commentators. He is the director of WhatTheyThink's Economics and Research Center.

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