Posts Tagged ‘U.S.’

Rut-Roh: Credit Rating Agency Just Not That Into U.S. Debt Right Now

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

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(photo credit: striatic)

Well, that pesky federal deficit has finally caught up with us. Standard & Poor’s, a credit rating agency that basically judges how risky (or safe) it is to invest in a country, has officially said that the United States’s economic shenanigans may end up costing it its pristine AAA credit rating. (That’s three A’s, so you know it’s extra awesome.) The main reason? Washington’s seeming inability to agree on a plan to reduce the deficit.

S&P didn’t actually downgrade America’s credit rating, but it did change its “outlook” from “stable” to “negative.” This is basically a shot across the bow, or a warning from your mother that if you keep hanging out with those corner boys all you’ll get is a reputation.

This is kind of a big deal. If the U.S. is downgraded (and according to S&P is could be within three years), we’ll be out-credited by France. And foreign investors might be less interested in buying Treasury bonds, which would cut off an important source of income for the government. Which might result in more cuts to services like health care, education, and, you know, repairing roads.

Let’s see where we are in two years. In the meantime, how do you think you would do in S&P’s eyes?

Can you weather the credit storm?

Do you know where the wealth is?

Friday, March 25th, 2011

According to new research from Harvard Business School, most Americans have no idea how wealth is distributed in this country.

Here’s a handy chart from the study that pretty clearly illustrates how Americans think wealth is distributed, how they wish it was distributed, and how it’s actually distributed:

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(click chart to download a pdf of the study)

Did you know that there was such a huge difference between the very top and the very bottom of the wealth scale?

  • - The top 1% (about 3 million people out of 300 million) holds 50% of the nation’s total wealth, and the top 20% owns 85%.
  • – The bottom 20% of Americans (about 62 million people) owns less than 5%.

There’s an interesting discussion on the New York Times about why this might be the case, why Americans underestimate income inequality, and whether we should even care.

Are you surprised? What would you have guessed?

Bet You Didn’t Know: The U.S. Still Manufactures 40% More Stuff Than China

Friday, February 11th, 2011

“WASHINGTON — U.S. factories are closing. American manufacturing jobs are reappearing overseas. China’s industrial might is growing each year.

Yet America remains by far the No. 1 manufacturing country. It out-produces No. 2 China by more than 40 percent. U.S. manufacturers cranked out nearly $1.7 trillion in goods in 2009, according to the United Nations.

The story of American factories essentially boils down to this: They’ve managed to make more goods with fewer workers.”

What do you think?

What if higher production adds up to fewer jobs? Is efficiency always a good thing?

How often do you see “Made in U.S.A.” on the products you buy? How about “China?”

Hu’s on First? China’s Leader Hu Jintao and Barack Obama To Talk Money (and Power) At White House

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

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credit: Ivan Walsh

In important trade talks with China, the U.S. wants to make sure American companies can do business in the world’s second biggest economy…

  • The U.S. is still the biggest economy in the world, but China is #2 and growing. So of course American companies want to do business there.
  • The problem, according to many U.S. companies: China is shutting them out.
  • The Chinese government is creating loads of restrictions that make it really hard for foreign companies to thrive.
  • At Wednesday’s meeting, Obama is expected to take a tougher stance to get China to relax its foreign trade rules.

Facts and Figures

  • Obama and Hu will meet with 18 business leaders from China and the U.S. in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in DC on Wednesday

Best Quote

“U.S. companies have issues with China in many different business sectors.” – John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council in Washington, D.C.

What do you think?

Has any part of your life been touched by the rise of China?