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by Chris Martenson

There were quite a few comments and questions from the last Martenson Report (Nowhere to Run – A Monetary Crisis).  Now that I am back, finally, from all of my traveling and vacation, I want to address a few of those queries.   If I have not gotten to your question and it’s important to you, please ask it again here and I’ll do my best to get to it.

One question ‘theme’ centered on seeking clarification of money, how it gets into circulation, and what is meant by ‘printing.’

Here’s one from user acomfort:

“Nowhere to Run – A Monetary Crisis” Follow-Up
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

There were quite a few comments and questions from the last Martenson Report (Nowhere to Run – A Monetary Crisis).  Now that I am back, finally, from all of my traveling and vacation, I want to address a few of those queries.   If I have not gotten to your question and it’s important to you, please ask it again here and I’ll do my best to get to it.

One question ‘theme’ centered on seeking clarification of money, how it gets into circulation, and what is meant by ‘printing.’

Here’s one from user acomfort:

by Chris Martenson

Today the Commerce Department reported excellent economic news for January; retail sales climbed another 0.5%, the third gain in four months, and were up a hefty 4.7%, compared to a year ago.

U.S. Economy: Retail Sales Climb

Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — January sales at U.S. retailers climbed more than anticipated, while consumer confidence unexpectedly fell this month from a two-year high, showing a recovery in household spending may be gradual.

Retail purchases increased 0.5 percent, the third gain in the past four months, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The Reuters/University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment gauge dropped to 73.7 from 74.4 the prior month.

Compared to January last year, sales were up 4.7 percent.

Unfortunately, somebody forgot to tell the states this excellent news, because their sales tax data for January is still miserable.

Fuzzy Numbers – Retail Sales
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

Today the Commerce Department reported excellent economic news for January; retail sales climbed another 0.5%, the third gain in four months, and were up a hefty 4.7%, compared to a year ago.

U.S. Economy: Retail Sales Climb

Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — January sales at U.S. retailers climbed more than anticipated, while consumer confidence unexpectedly fell this month from a two-year high, showing a recovery in household spending may be gradual.

Retail purchases increased 0.5 percent, the third gain in the past four months, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The Reuters/University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment gauge dropped to 73.7 from 74.4 the prior month.

Compared to January last year, sales were up 4.7 percent.

Unfortunately, somebody forgot to tell the states this excellent news, because their sales tax data for January is still miserable.

by Chris Martenson

If you’ve watched Chapter 16 of the Crash Course (Fuzzy Numbers), you know that I am especially dismissive of the way in which the BEA calculates the US GDP figures.


All manner of statistical tricks, many of which would land private business accountants in jail, are used to create an overly optimistic view of the GDP.


Recently the US GDP was reported as being +2.2% for the 3Q09, and many are calling for 4Q09 to come in at around +3%.


This means that when we add these to the -6.4% 1Q09 and -0.7% 2Q09 results and average everything together, the full year will have been down less than half a percent.


Imagine that….with auto and home sales off by more than 10%, with port shipments down by some 20%, with gasoline and electricity use back to levels last seen in a prior decade, with unemployment over 10% (and the underemployed number at 17%), and with the largest-ever collapse in household borrowing on record….the BEA manages to come out with a full-year GDP report that will show an exceptionally modest decline of roughly one-half of one percent.

More Fuzzy Numbers – GDP Wildly Overstated
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

If you’ve watched Chapter 16 of the Crash Course (Fuzzy Numbers), you know that I am especially dismissive of the way in which the BEA calculates the US GDP figures.


All manner of statistical tricks, many of which would land private business accountants in jail, are used to create an overly optimistic view of the GDP.


Recently the US GDP was reported as being +2.2% for the 3Q09, and many are calling for 4Q09 to come in at around +3%.


This means that when we add these to the -6.4% 1Q09 and -0.7% 2Q09 results and average everything together, the full year will have been down less than half a percent.


Imagine that….with auto and home sales off by more than 10%, with port shipments down by some 20%, with gasoline and electricity use back to levels last seen in a prior decade, with unemployment over 10% (and the underemployed number at 17%), and with the largest-ever collapse in household borrowing on record….the BEA manages to come out with a full-year GDP report that will show an exceptionally modest decline of roughly one-half of one percent.

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