The reduction of growth and increase in unemployment put the current U.S. president’s aspirations in danger.
In the first three months of this year, the U.S. revised the amount of growth achieved in this period (2.2 percent annually), reducing it to 1.9 percent; at the same time, the number of jobs created in April and May (77,000/69,000) were less than half those expected from the market and the lowest level in five months.
Because of this comes increased unemployment; it passed from 8.1 percent to 8.2 percent. And this happens five months before the presidential election.
Furthermore, the level of participation in the workforce has fallen more than two percentage points (63.8 to 66 percent) and 5 million workers have left the job market because of the impossibility of finding work. This raises the real level of unemployment to 10 percent.
The American electorate has few rules and offers scarce regularities.
But one of these is clear: Since World War II, if unemployment rose above 8 percent before November, the president in office lost the electoral competition.
The American economy is fundamentally composed of services (70 percent of GDP); this sector is the principal source of job creation, above all in the health sector. In April, this sector contributed 33,000 jobs, while the manufacturing industry created 12,000 jobs, highly skilled and remunerated.
The rate of growth in the long term for the American economy is 3.1 percent annually; it fell to 5 percent of national product in the recession of December 2007 to July 2009. If you add up the loss of a year and a half of potential expansion, America will have to recuperate almost 10 percentage points of the GDP at a much faster rhythm.
This is not happening. The level of growth in the recuperation phase that started in July 2009 has been 2.4 percent each year and fell to 1.9 percent in the first quarter of 2012, less than half of what would be necessary to recover the lost product.
The surprising part of the American situation is that this fall in the growth potential and its corollary, the increase in unemployment, happen while exports grow 16 percent, industrial production expands 6 percent each year and business earnings increased 9 percent in the last 12 months and are now experiencing the highest level in 70 years.
The result is that capital available to companies rises to $1.7 billion and, in the condition of transnational firms, accumulates in the exterior to a similar figure ($1.4 billion). However, the investment level is 23 to 25 percent less than in the stage previous to the crisis (2006-2007).
Capital available for investment is the highest it has been in 20 years and effective investment is a fourth less than that during the recuperation phase, which has taken place since July 2009.
The American paradox is the reticence to invest when there are enormous amounts of resources available to do so.
In this scene, from the U.S. emerges something deeply novel that modifies the conditions of accumulation and changes the precautions about its own indicators. The production of natural gas trapped in rocks (shale gas) has risen 12 times over the past 10 years and now provides 25 percent of domestic demand, and would be 50 percent in 2020. The eruption of shale gas grants the manufacturing industry a comparative advantage in entry costs — somewhere between 60 and 80 percent with respect to competitors in China, Japan, South Korea and Germany. In this decade the U.S. and Canada will transform globally into the principal providers of low cost energy; moreover, the U.S. will achieve self-sufficiency in energy, which modifies the strategic global equation.
What is predictable is an investment boom in the energy and manufacturing sectors and in all of the production chain, multiplying exports and a rise in the growth rate of 1 percent each year. The presidential election in November is five months away.
Por el freno en la economÃa peligra la reelección de Obama
Datos adversos. La disminución del crecimiento y el aumento de la desocupación ponen en peligro las aspiraciones del actual presidente norteamericano.
En los primeros tres meses del año, EE.UU. revisó la expansión lograda en ese perÃodo (2,2% anual) y la redujo a 1,9%; al mismo tiempo, los puestos de trabajo creados en abril y mayo (77.000/69.000), resultaron menos de la mitad de las expectativas del mercado y el menor nivel en 5 meses.
Por eso aumentó la desocupación: pasó de 8,1% a 8,2%. Esto ocurrió cuando faltan cinco meses para las elecciones presidenciales.
Además, la tasa de participación laboral ha caÃdo más de 2 puntos (63,8% vs. 66%) y son 5 millones los operarios que han abandonado el mercado de trabajo ante la imposibilidad de conseguir empleo. Esto hace que el nivel de desempleo real sea 10%.
La polÃtica electoral norteamericana tiene pocas reglas y ofrece escasas regularidades.
Pero una de ellas es nÃtida.
Desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial, si se arriba a noviembre con una desocupación de 8%, el presidente que disputa la reelección tiene perdida la contienda electoral.
Esto no está ocurriendo. El nivel de crecimiento en la fase de recuperación que comenzó en julio de 2009 ha sido 2,4% por año y disminuyó a 1,9% en el primer trimestre de 2012, menos de la mitad de lo que serÃa necesario para recuperar el producto perdido .
Lo sorprendente de la situación norteamericana es que esta caÃda del crecimiento potencial y su correlato, el aumento de la desocupación, ocurren mientras las exportaciones crecen 16%, la producción industrial se expande 6% por año y las ganancias de las empresas aumentaron 9% en los últimos 12 meses y se encuentran ahora en el mayor nivel en 70 años.
El resultado es que el capital disponible de las compañÃas asciende a U$S 1,7 billones y, en su condición de firmas trasnacionales, acumulan en el exterior una cifra semejante (U$S 1,4 billones). Y sin embargo, el nivel de inversión es 23%/25% menor al de la etapa previa a la crisis (2006-2007).
El capital disponible para realizar inversiones es el más elevado en 20 años y la inversión efectiva es una cuarta parte menor a la propia de una fase de recuperación, como la que tiene lugar desde julio de 2009. La paradoja norteamericana es esta reticencia a invertir cuando dispone de enormes recursos para hacerlo.
We are faced with a "scenario" in which Washington's exclusive and absolute dominance over the entire hemisphere, from Greenland and Canada in the north to the southern reaches of Argentina and Chile.
Venezuela is likely to become another wasted crisis, resembling events that followed when the U.S. forced regime changes in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.