RT
is back online
After
disastrous US job report, QE3 expected next week
The
percentage of able-bodied Americans searching for jobs has hit a
30-year-low, and Wall Street now expects the US Federal Reserve to
announce a new round of quantitative easing as early as next week.
RT,
7
September, 2012
The
US Labor Department released their workforce statistics for August
2012 on Friday, and the figures are far from what economists had
expected.
The
Labor Department announced this week that while the unemployment rate
last month dropped slightly to 8.1 percent, July’s figure was
revised to show that fewer jobs, in fact, were added that month. For
August, the US economy added 96,000 new jobs, a substantially smaller
figure than predicted. The median statistic that Bloomberg found
after surveying nearly 100 economists came to 130,000 new jobs.
Additionally,
the participation rate — the labor force as a percent of the
population as a whole — charted at 63.5 percent, the lowest figure
the country has seen since September 1981.
House
of Representatives Speaker John Boehner was quick to come down on the
Obama White House over the latest news, releasing a statement on
Friday that attacks US President Barack Obama and his “failed
promises to get our economy moving again.”
"Wages
are stagnant, gas prices and health care costs are up, our national
debt has surpassed $16 trillion and millions of Americans remain out
of work or underemployed,” Speaker Boehner said, only hours after
President Obama accepted the Democratic Party’s nomination to run
for reelection.
“I’m
very concerned about those of us who are unemployed and where are we
going to find stable employment,” would-be worker Kimberly Hackler
of White, Georgia tells Bloomberg. Hackler says she has been looking
for work since November, applying for close to 200 positions in the
last year but coming up empty handed after each try.
“I
don’t see the economy improving anytime soon. I am concerned it
could get worse,” Hackler says.
Some
economists expect the same outcome, in fact, and predict that the
Federal Reserve may now finally step up to the plate. According to
them, now is the perfect time for the US central bank to start third
round of quantitative easing, or QE3, to address America’s economic
woes.
In
a statement made early Friday, Goldman Sachs tells reporters that
they expect the Fed to announce plans for QE3 during an already
scheduled meeting next week among the Federal Open Market Committee,
more than a year ahead of when they had originally anticipated the
maneuver.
“With
today’s August employment report showing a nonfarm payroll gain of
96,000 and an unemployment rate of 8.1% because of a drop in the
participation rate, we expect a return to unsterilized and probably
open-ended asset purchases at the September 12-13 FOMC meeting,”
the bankers write.
“We
now anticipate that the FOMC will announce a return to unsterilized
asset purchases (QE3), mainly agency mortgage-backed securities but
potentially including Treasury securities, at its September 12-13
FOMC meeting. We previously forecasted QE3 in December or early 2013.
We continue to expect a lengthening of the FOMC’s forward guidance
for the first hike in the funds rate from “late 2014” to mid-2015
or beyond,” Goldman adds.
Joseph
Trevisani, chief market strategist at Worldwide Markets in, New
Jersey, says to Reuters, "This weak employment report, in jobs,
wages, hours worked and participation is probably the last piece the
Fed needs before launching another round of quantitative easing next
week.”
Last
month, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told an audience at his
annual Jackson Hole address, "The stagnation of the labor market
in particular is a grave concern not only because of the enormous
suffering and waste of human talent it entails, but also because
persistently high levels of unemployment will wreak structural damage
on our economy that could last for many years.” The Fed has been
thought to be preparing a round of quantitative easing for the last
year amid dire employment levels, but the Labor Department’s latest
news may have finally pushed them over the edge.
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