Economy Doing So Well, Fed Carries Out Staged Withdrawal

Yes, the economy is doing so well, in the coming final day of the Fed’s staged withdrawal from QE, the Fed’s choppers will leave from the rooftops of Washington and Wall Street as friendly forces scramble to get aboard the last one. That’s how well things are going.

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As the banksters leave town with their sacks of stolen gold on the last of those Fed copters, the population will be abandoned to fend for itself, after years of having their savings stolen and no fake jobs created to ease their pain in return. The good manufacturing jobs left decades ago, and there are no new orders for big ticket goods coming to restore them.

Real Durable Goods Orders- Click to enlarge

Real Durable Goods Orders- Click to enlarge

JOLTS Headline - Bloomberg - Click to view actual size

Job openings in the U.S. rose more than forecast in February to a six-year high as employers moved to boost hiring in response to rising consumer demand.

The number of positions waiting to be filled in the U.S. climbed by 299,000 to 4.17 million in February, the most since January 2008, from a revised 3.87 million the month before, the Labor Department reported today in Washington.

I wondered if those “positions” were missionary or doggie style. And I thought, “Wow, since 2008? But aren’t there 24 million more Americans now than then? Wouldn’t it be more honest to reveal the job openings ratio?” So, as is my compulsion, I chewed on my thoughts and digested them. Below is what came out.

Job Openings Ratio - Click to enlarge

Job Openings Ratio – Click to enlarge

Yes, there are almost as many job openings today as there were in February 2008, about 1.62/100 of population now versus 1.65 then. And the ratio is much better than it was in the pits of the depression in 2009 and 2010.

But 5 years of the Fed’s helicopter money to speculators and banksters and ZIRP’s financial genocide of savers have not brought back the fake bubble jobs of 2006 and 2007. And we’re not even close to getting back to the 2001 level, which was boosted by the remnant fake jobs left over from the then collapsing internet bubble.

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