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Existing Home Sales Rise 10.1 Percent - CBS MoneyWatch.com - 0 views

shared by Saskia K on 26 Nov 09 - Cached
  • Existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – surged 10.1 percent
  • Existing-home sales – including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – surged 10.1 percent
  • This is, of course, good news, but the question is how much of the increase is being driven by the government’s tax credit program to help first-time homebuyers, and how much of it would have occurred even without the tax credit
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    This article relates to the recession and abrupt rises in home sales. This surprised me, as industry is taking long to recover in some areas, and home sales have been a primary trigger for the recession in the first place. This article also underlines that there were other factors influencing the growth, namely the first-time buyer tax credit. What will the effects of this be on the long run? and will home sales continue to grow at such a rate when tax credits are reduced? Also, what do you think are the reasons for growth in home sales in the first place not taking into account the buyer tax credit? Other countries' home sales are still struggling while at the origin of the debacle sales are booming? What led to this recovery? Loads of questions :P
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Botswana's impatient president: Diamonds are not for ever | The Economist - 2 views

    • theodor bolin
       
      This article "Diamonds are not forever" from The Economist is a proof of how demand and supply works. When the global economic crisis came the diamond market was heavily affected. Botswana still had a good supply of diamonds but when the demand dropped for diamonds many mines had to close. The annual output dropped by 40%. This resulted in a much lower profit for Botswana which is very critical for the country since diamonds have an important role in Botswana's economy.
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    Good job finding this article Theo. I've given you a bonus mark. It's interesting reading how DeBeers has actually withheld their diamonds to keep the prices up. Thanks.
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    I still believe diamonds will always be a relatively steady investement and when buying them currently the prices haven't dropped much for the consumer. In fact, it was mostly rough diamond prices which plunged. Until now, diamonds have often be said NOT to behave like normal commodities with great fluxuations in price and demand. Although there has been an understandable downfall in demand due to shortage of cash, diamonds will remain a steady investement in the future in accesoires and jewelry. Since industry has reduced however in many parts, industrial diamonds will take time to recover with respect to the recovery of industries using diamonds for e.g. cutting hard material. As for Botswana, the deficit in demand increases unemployment as all over the world due to the recession, but the sales will slowly rise again with evolving technology where materials such as diamonds are necessary for production. Therefore I agree with most of your analysis, but disagree with the title of the article "Diamonds are Not forever"!
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    Just a follow up on my previous comment. I went to Antwerp over the weekend and concerning diamonds, it's become more of a mystery than ever. Even diamonds dealers cannot comprehend the diamond market completely and apparently the most secretive and complex market to understand is that of industrial diamonds. Currents loads of firms are actually buying more diamonds than they need to keep the price from rising! I just thought that was something to think about...in contrast to the withholding of diamonds to keep the price from falling!
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    Wow. Who knew diamonds could be such an interesting industry! Did your source in Antwerp give you any indication of why firms thought that was a good idea? I wonder if they are afraid DeBeers will buy them all if they don't and keep moving the prices higher? Ceteris paribus this is not!
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    Well in the industry the diamonds that are needed are extremely different from industry to industry and one company to the next. They need very particular diamonds with specified charcteristics in the range of categories diamonds are sold in. Diamonds that are for sale in jewlerry stores are particular to the demand of customers with least colour and most clarity. Due to this demand, the price of these particular diamonds is extremely high. The demand in industry is also specific, though subject to change due to innovation, hence prices for particular industrial diamonds would be extremely high IF the sellers would know what the industry needed. To prevent this from happening, the industry buys a wider range of industrial diamonds to keep their actual demand secretive and prevent prices from rising. This behaviour is becoming more extreme due to the uncertainty in the diamond market currently. I only understood half of what i was told really and even these gigantic sellers are cannot understand the whole workings of the industrial diamond market which is apparently handled with great secrecy and care. I really hope this made sense though :P
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BBC NEWS | Business | Surprise rise in Australian jobs - 0 views

    • Tim Woods
       
      HOw does this relate to Macro?
    • Thomas H
       
      People will have more money in banks, so people will either save more or decide they can spend more since they get more moeny from the bank where they keep their money. The value of Australia's menoy will also go up, as more investors are attracted to the higher interest rates.
  • It is the second monthly gain in a row and has led analysts to speculate that interest rates will be increased in December to 3.75% from 3.5%.
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    Also, a rise in interest rates means that the government is trying to slow down economic growth. This is because when the rates are low people can borrow money cheaply and invest in things, like new machines for their business or whatever. Exchange rates are a bit trickier. What you say Thomas is right, but the reasons for this are a bit complicated. The main effect of the interest rate rise is a slowdown of growth because people have less money that they can spend. However, a bit ironically, an increase in interest rates actually means that the economy there must be doing really well. They wouldn't dare raise the rates in the US at the moment.
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Heritage Turkeys Selling Briskly, Even at $10 a Pound - NYTimes.com - 1 views

    • Salim Shehu
       
      The farmer raised about 2500 turkeys and sold the all by lowering his price. By lowering his prices, he was able to sell all of his turkeys. This mean when he lowered the price, he increased his demand.
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    I like the article and how it relates to the demand of customers and reflects their situation, but I cannot find where it says the farmer "lowered" his price, it only mentions it waslower than others...it also says that those turkeys selling for more are also selling well. It's a good article though :) especially on thanksgiving.
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The week ahead | The Economist - 2 views

shared by Aymeric G-P on 24 Nov 09 - Cached
    • Aymeric G-P
       
      This small part of an article from the Economist.com relates to last Microeconomics subject we studied: supply and demand law. Indeed, the author implies that the tastes and expectations will certainly change for the good in the next days or weeks as we are entering the thanksgiving and christmas period. The thanksgiving period is the time where americans consume the most goods. The author just hopes that the consumers won't remember the huge crisis.
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Three cheers for the death of old economics | Anatole Kaletsky - Times Online - 1 views

    • Tim Woods
       
      This is worth a read. It highlights the fact that a lot of the most important ideas of economics weren't thought up by economists at all. You won't find this in astrophysics my friends.
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    So this is article is saying that while the use of mathematics and mathematical models in economics is quite effective that today's economists have ceased to be able to explain the unpredictability of the world and its economy due to their reliance on mathematics. So due to the fact that this movement of using mathematics to explain the world economy has lead to be the dismissal of things that cannot be explained by utilizing mathematics, and that in the aftermath of the recent economic breakdown people have realized the economists of today cannot explain most of the economic forces at work today? In this article the author thinks all work in economics for the past twenty years or so has been very inefficient at explaining the world economy and thinks a wave of new ways of thinking is the only way the economics can resume it role at explaining the economy. Do you think that going back to the ways of men such as Keynes and Smith would be beneficial or that to be able to explain the world economy on needs to rely on the rigor of mathematics solely?
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BBC NEWS | Europe | Medvedev calls for economy reform - 2 views

    • Tim Woods
       
      Hey guys what do you think of this?
  • Inefficient state giants should be overhauled and issues of accountability and transparency addressed, he said. "Instead of a primitive economy based on raw materials, we shall create a smart economy, producing unique knowledge, new goods and technologies, goods and technologies useful for people," Mr Medvedev said. "Instead of an archaic society, in which leaders think and decide for everybody, we shall become a society of intelligent, free and responsible people."
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    if this would become reality in Russia that would be great... Transparency of governments is also a topic on the UN agenda and in its basis also very herlpful to the population, however considering Russia's history (as well as Histories of many other countries) there is still a long way to go to achieving transparency. The idea of freedom depends entirely on one's definition of it. The GDR for example may have called their nation "free" while its citizens were not aloud to freely leave the country. In addition there are many different types and interpretations of freedom reaching from religious freedom to freedom of speech. Complete freedom of press is nonexistant in modern society and has in countries like Russia been doubted numerous times. This doesn't mean that freedom cannot be achieved, but it isn't easy. I like Medvedev's word choice though and his ideology seems good for Russia's economy. I especially like the emphasis on a "smart" and intelligent economy with fresh input instead of the old paths.
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U.S. Foreclosure Filings Surpass 300,000 for 8th Straight Month - Bloomberg.com - 3 views

shared by Tim Woods on 12 Nov 09 - Cached
    • Tim Woods
       
      You can see how this relates to supply and demand. We're not out of the woods yet, as far as the recession. But it may be a good opportunity to buy (if you're looking to start your empire early).
  • “The foreclosure problem is still with us and will keep prices down,” Stephen Miller, chairman of the economics department at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, said in an interview. “The real issue is we don’t know what inventory banks are holding that they have yet to put on the market.” Distressed real estate transactions accounted for 30 percent of all home sales in the third quarter as the median price fell 11 percent from a year earlier to $177,900, according to the National Association of Realtors. U.S. unemployment surged to a 26-year high of 10.2 percent in October as payrolls fell by 190,000 workers, the Labor Department said last week.
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Editorial - Jobless Recovery - NYTimes.com - 2 views

    • Tim Woods
       
      What answers, from our course, would help with this problem of underemployment?
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Paul Krugman: We Are In Economic "Purgatory" (VIDEO) - 0 views

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    "We've got a problem with terminology because we usually say either the economy is in recession or the economy is recovering. Either you're in hell or you're in heaven. And the trouble is we're actually in purgatory. We're actually in a situation almost for sure GDP is growing; almost for sure the business cycle leading committee will eventually decide the recession ended this summer. But almost surely also we're still losing jobs. The unemployment rate is going to continue to rise. So we're in that infamous jobless recovery state. "
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