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durable-goods-reuters

American workers at a manufacturing plant for long-lasting durable goods. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

New durable goods order increases by 1.7% in February to slightly beat the median forecast by 0.2%, while shipments surged 1% after losing 0.3% in January. However, the weakest link in the report is core capital goods (non-defense ex-aircraft), where orders fell 0.1% in February juxtaposed to expectations for a 0.5% gain.

It follows January’s revised 0.1% gain.

Core capital goods shipments are used to calculate equipment spending in the government’s gross domestic product measurement. Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) reported on its website that it had received orders for 43 aircraft last month, up from 26 in January.

Civilian aircraft orders soared 47.6% in February.

New durable goods order increases by 1.7%

President Donald Trump shows his signature on an executive order on the Keystone XL pipeline, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017. (Photo: AP)

President Donald Trump shows his signature on an executive order on the Keystone XL pipeline, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017. (Photo: AP)

The Trump Administration has issued a presidential permit to TransCanada to move forward with the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. The permit comes after years of delay from the Obama Administration.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer tweeted that President Donald J. Trump would discuss the pipeline later Friday morning.

The State Department says it considered foreign policy and energy security in making the determination, and concluded that building the Keystone XL pipeline serves the U.S. national interest. Tom Shannon, a career diplomat serving as undersecretary of state for political affairs, signed the permit rather than Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who previously recused himself due to his previous roles as CEO of Exxon Mobil.

According to multiple State Department reviews under both Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, the Keystone pipeline would’ve actually benefited the environment by reducing the amount of emissions from transporting oil via rail and other methods currently in place.

Further, the resources would’ve gone to foreign nations such as China, which have far more lax emission standards. Yet, the Obama Administration rejected the findings and the pipeline as not in the national interest. Then, in 2015, former President Barack Obama vetoed the bipartisan Keystone Jobs bill, marking his first veto of the Republican-led Congress and only the third of his presidency. TransCanada filed a federal lawsuit in response at the beginning of 2016.

The Alberta-based company claimed the White House arbitrarily, illegally and unconstitutionally rejected the project after multiple reviews gave the project the green light.

Americans overwhelmingly support construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, including a majority of Democrats (53%), over two-thirds of independents (68%) and nearly 9 in 10 Republicans (88%). According to a recent poll, 69% support the pipeline outright, up from 65% measured last year. However, 72% support its construction when respondents are told of the Obama administration’s own findings.

Keystone will carry tar sands oil from Canada to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast. Of the three executive orders President Trump signed related to pipeline construction projects, one aimed to expedite the environmental permitting process for infrastructure projects and another directed the Commerce Department to maximize the use of U.S. steel.

The Trump Administration has issued a presidential

healthcare-capitol-hill

Capitol Hill and healthcare emblem.

I’m flabbergasted when people assert that America’s costly and inefficient healthcare system is proof that free markets don’t work.

In hopes of helping them understand what’s really going on, I try to explain to them that an unfettered market involves consumers and producers directly interacting with their own money in an open and competitive environment.

I then explain why that’s not a description of the U.S. system. Not even close. As I noted in Part I, consumers directly finance only 10.5 percent of their healthcare expenses. Everything else involves a third-party payer thanks to government interventions such as Medicare, Medicaid, the healthcare exclusion, the Veterans Administration, etc.

Obamacare then added another layer of intervention to the existing mess. By my rough calculations, that costly boondoggle took the country from having a system that was 68-percent controlled and dictated by government to a system where government dictates and controls 79 percent of the system.

This is very relevant because Republicans in Washington are now trying to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, but they’re confronting a very unpleasant reality. Undoing that legislation won’t create a stable, market-driven healthcare system. Instead, we’d only be back to where we were in 2010 – a system where government would still be the dominant player and market forces would be almost totally emasculated.

The only difference is that Republicans would then get blamed for everything that goes wrong in the world of healthcare rather than Obama and the Democrats (and you better believe that’s a big part of the decision-making process on Capitol Hill).

Yes, the GOP plan would save some money, which is laudable, but presumably the main goal is to have a sensible and sustainable healthcare system. And that’s not going to happen unless there’s some effort to somehow unravel the overall mess that’s been created by all the misguided government policies that have accumulated over many decades.

This isn’t a new or brilliant observation. Milton Friedman wrote about how government-controlled healthcare leads to higher costs and lower quality back in 1977, but I can’t find an online version of that article, so let’s look at what he said in a 1978 speech to the Mayo Institute.

[brid video=”123612″ player=”2077″ title=”Milton Friedman on Medical Care (Full Lecture)”]

I realize that many people won’t have 45 minutes of spare time to watch the entire video, so I’ll also provide some excerpts from a column Friedman wrote back in the early 1990s that makes the same points. He started by observing that bureaucratic systems have ever-rising costs combined with ever-declining output.

…a study by Max Gammon…comparing input and output in the British socialized hospital system…found that input had increased sharply, while output had actually fallen. He was led to enunciate what he called “the theory of bureaucratic displacement.” In his words, in “a bureaucratic system . . . increase in expenditure will be matched by fall in production. . . . Such systems will act rather like `black holes,’ in the economic universe, simultaneously sucking in resources, and shrinking in terms of `emitted production.’” …concern about the rising cost of medical care, and of proposals to do something about it — most involving a further move toward the complete socialization of medicine — reminded me of the Gammon study and led me to investigate whether his law applied to U.S. health care.

Friedman then noted how this bureaucratic rule operated in the United States after the healthcare exclusion was adopted during World War II.

Even a casual glance at figures on input and output in U.S. hospitals indicates that Gammon’s law has been in full operation for U.S. hospitals since the end of World War II… Before 1940, input and output both rose, input somewhat more than output, presumably because of the introduction of more sophisticated and expensive treatment. The cost of hospital care per resident of the U.S., adjusted for inflation, rose from 1929 to 1940 at the rate of 5% per year; the number of occupied beds, at 2.4% a year. Cost per patient day, adjusted for inflation, rose only modestly. The situation was very different after the war. From 1946 to 1989, the number of beds per 1,000 population fell by more than one-half; the occupancy rate, by one-eighth. In sharp contrast, input skyrocketed. Hospital personnel per occupied bed multiplied nearly seven-fold and cost per patient day, adjusted for inflation, an astounding 26-fold.

Friedman then explained that the adoption of Medicare and Medicaid hastened the erosion of market forces.

One major engine of these changes was the enactment of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965. A mild rise in input was turned into a meteoric rise; a mild fall in output, into a rapid decline. …The federal government’s assumption of responsibility for hospital and medical care for the elderly and the poor provided a fresh pool of money, and there was no shortage of takers. Personnel per occupied bed, which had already doubled from 1946 to 1965, more than tripled from that level after 1965. Cost per patient day, which had already more than tripled from 1946 to 1965, multiplied a further eight-fold after 1965. Growing costs, in turn, led to more regulation of hospitals, further increasing administrative expense.

Remember, Friedman wrote this article back in 1991. And the underlying problems have gotten worse since that time.

So what’s the bottom line? Friedman pointed out that the problem is too much government.

The U.S. medical system has become in large part a socialist enterprise. Why should we be any better at socialism than the Soviets?

And he explained that there’s only one genuine solution.

The inefficiency, high cost and inequitable character of our medical system can be fundamentally remedied in only one way: by moving in the other direction, toward re-privatizing medical care.

Some readers may be skeptical. Even though he cited lots of historical evidence, perhaps you’re thinking Friedman’s position is impractical.

So let’s fast forward to 2017 and look at some very concrete data assembled by Mark Perry of the American Enterprise Institute. He looks at medical costs over the past 18 years and compares what’s happened with prices for things that are covered by third-party payer (either government or government-distorted private insurance) and prices for cosmetic procedures that are financed directly by consumers.

As you can see, the relative price of health care generally declines when people are spending their own money and operating in a genuine free market. But when there’s third-party payer, relative prices rise.

Perry explains the issue very succinctly.

Cosmetic procedures, unlike most medical services, are not usually covered by insurance. Patients paying 100% out-of-pocket for elective cosmetic procedures are cost-conscious, and have strong incentives to shop around and compare prices at the dozens of competing providers in any large city. Providers operate in a very competitive market with transparent pricing and therefore have incentives to provide cosmetic procedures at competitive prices. Those providers are also less burdened and encumbered by the bureaucratic paperwork that is typically involved with the provision of most standard medical care with third-party payments. Because of the price transparency and market competition that characterizes the market for cosmetic procedures, the prices of most cosmetic procedures have fallen in real terms since 1998, and some non-surgical procedures have even fallen in nominal dollars before adjusting for price changes. In all cases, cosmetic procedures have increased in price by far less than the 100.5% increase in the price of medical care services between 1998 and 2016 and the 176.6% increase in hospital services.

In other words, a free market can work in healthcare. And it gives us falling prices and transparency rather than bureaucracy and inefficiency. Maybe when they’ve exhausted all other options, Republicans will decide to give freedom a try.

Healthcare costs have increased as consumers directly

Devin Nunes, R-Calif. briefs reporters about information he received confirming “incidental collection” of intelligence on members of the Trump transition team under the Obama Administration. (Photo: AP)

Devin Nunes, R-Calif. briefs reporters about information he received confirming “incidental collection” of intelligence on members of the Trump transition team under the Obama Administration. (Photo: AP)

James Rosen, the the chief Washington correspondent at Fox News, is reporting congressional investigators expect a potential “smoking gun” proving the Obama Administration spied on the Trump transition team and “possibly” the president-elect, himself.

Sources tell Mr. Rosen further evidence will be produced to the House Intelligence Committee in its entirety this week that will “leave no doubt the Obama Administration, in its closing days, was using the cover of legitimate surveillance on foreign targets to spy on President-elect Trump.”

Citing sources, Mr. Rosen’s report echoes a previous article by People’s Pundit Daily published on Wednesday claiming information was provided to lawmakers indicating the Obama Administration used a ruse FISA warrant to conduct surveillance on individuals close to incoming President Donald J. Trump to avoid obtaining a proper warrant.

The PPD report also suggested intelligence officials and mostly Democratic lawmakers were playing word games denying the Obama Administration “wiretapped” Trump Tower.

On Wednesday, House intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., confirmed “incidental collection” of intelligence on members of the Trump transition team under the Obama Administration. However, the intelligence community engaged in what is being characterized as legal surveillance operations.

“I recently confirmed on numerous occasions the intelligence community incidentally collected intelligence,” Chairman Nunes said, adding he was “alarmed” and didn’t understand “why people would need to know that about President-elect Trump and his transition team.”

Chairman Nunes’s intelligence came from multiple sources during a span of several weeks. As of this morning, he had not shared the actual materials with the rest of the committee, which set off a political firestorm among Democrats. However, Fox News was told Intelligence Committee Ranking Member Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., has now been briefed on the basic contents of the intelligence described by Chairman Nunes.

As People’s Pundit Daily has also reported, the Justice Department has not yet approved a FBI request for additional tools to thoroughly probe the leaks of highly sensitive classified information. Congressional sources familiar with the briefings the FBI has already given to lawmakers say the Bureau has requested additional authorities to properly conduct a criminal probe, including the power to issue subpoenas and impanel grand juries.

However, as of Monday, the Bureau had not yet received that approval from the Justice Department, resulting in increased frustration among congressional and FBI investigators. According to sources, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, the FBI has already put together a “comprehensive but limited” list of government officials who had access to the specific classified information that was leaked, including the content of the phone call between Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

Lt. Gen. Flynn was fired following what the White House called a “gradual erosion of trust” after he misled Vice President Mike Pence. President Trump has vowed to expose the identify of the leakers and bring them to justice, which is a process the FBI is attempting to commence. But they cannot launch an effective investigation until the DOJ approves their request.

The information, in the form of a paper trail provided to Chairman Nunes, leaves the conclusion that there’s “no plausible purpose for the unmasking” other than to damage the incoming Trump Administration.

[social-media-buttons]

Report: Congressional investigators are expecting a potential

A real estate sign advertising a new home for sale is pictured in Vienna, Virginia, U.S. October 20, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

A real estate sign advertising a new home for sale is pictured in Vienna, Virginia, U.S. October 20, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

The Commerce Department said new home sales surged 6.1% higher in February to a 592,000 annualized rate, easily beating the median economic forecast. The Econoday consensus on new home sales, which account for roughly 9.7% of the overall market, called for 565,000.

But the report came in near the top estimate of 600,000.

“New home sales are the secret sauce that helps make the economy grow,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG Union Bank in New York. “This will put some backbone in investment spending and make this economic expansion more sustainable.”

The current supply of new homes on the market rose slightly, gaining 4,000 to 266,000. Still, relative to the sales supply they fell to 5.4 months from 5.6 months.

Sales appeared to have gotten a boost from builders as the median price fell a monthly 3.9% to $296,200 for a year-on-year rate. Even with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate at 4.3%, house prices gained 5.7% in January from a year ago. Further, the average price, which also reflects expensive high-end properties, jumped 9.9% in February to a yearly 11.7% gain at $390,400, setting a new record.

“Rising mortgage rates don’t appear to have been much of an impediment to increasing housing demand in February as solid job gains, faster wage growth, and stronger household formations offset the drop in affordability,” said David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide in Columbus, Ohio.

[social-media-buttons]

The Commerce Department said new home sales

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., arrives with Health and Humans Services Secretary Tom Price, R-Ga., for a closed-door GOP strategy session, on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C. on Tuesday. (Photo: AP/Associated Press)

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., arrives with Health and Humans Services Secretary Tom Price, R-Ga., for a closed-door GOP strategy session, on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C. on Tuesday. (Photo: AP/Associated Press)

The House vote on the American Health Care Act has been postponed after the president and leaders in Congress try to hatch out a deal to find more support. The Republicans in the House were scheduled to vote on the ObamaCare repeal bill on Thursday that would begin dismantling ObamaCare.

President Donald J. Trump continues to meet with House members to try to work out specific provisions, such as the mandate dealing with Essential Health Benefits. The House Freedom Caucus has dropped their demands from roughly 6 to 2, but House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has not yet agreed to writing the language that reflects an “agreement in principle” Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., said he reached with the president Wednesday night.

House Republicans will meet again behind closed doors Thursday night to further negotiate.

The House vote on the American Health

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a "terrorist incident" near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a “terrorist incident” near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

BREAKING: The man responsible for the terrorist attack in London near the UK Parliament has been identified as 52-year-old Khalid Masood. He was born in Kent and was most recently living in West Midlands.

Earlier Thursday, British Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed the man behind the terrorist attack at the UK Parliament was previously investigated for Islamic extremism.

Now, Scotland Yard says he had previous convictions for violence, including possession of offensive weapons, convictions for assaults and public order offenses.

“What I can confirm is that the man was British-born and that some years ago he was once investigated by MI5 in relation to concerns about violent extremism,” Prime Minister May said in a statement to the UK Parliament. “He was a peripheral figure. He was not part of the current intelligence picture. There was no prior intelligence of his intent or of the plot.”

The terror attack took place on the first anniversary of the attacks on Brussels in Belgium.

Police arrested eight people raiding six separate locations in London and Birmingham during the investigation following Wednesday’s terrorist attack that May said was inspired by a warped Islamist ideology.

Masood’s vehicle mowed down pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before the car crashed near the UK Parliament, Emerging from the vehicle armed with a knife, he went on the attack and tried to enter the government building where lawmakers were in session. He proceeded to stab a police officer and was shot on the grounds outside the UK Parliament.

Mr. Rowley said the 48-year-old police officer fatally wounded in his brave defense of the public was Keith Palmer.

Prime Minister May said the casualties included 12 Britons, three French children, two Romanians, four South Koreans, one German, one Pole, one Chinese, one American and two Greeks. Two of the three French were high-school students aged 15 and 16, who were on a school trip to London with fellow students from Brittany.

Mark Rowley, a top antiterrorism officer for the London Metropolitan Police (Scotland Yard), revised the death toll in the attack down by one, saying two civilians — a woman in her 40s and a man in his 50s — were killed, along with a police officer and the attacker.

“Greater clarity is now developing regarding the casualty figures as we have now collated information from the public and five hospitals,” Rowley said Thursday.

He also said 29 people were wounded, including seven who remained in critical condition on Thursday. That toll was also significantly lower than reported the previous day in the wake of the attack, when Rowley said 40 people were injured.

The man responsible for the terrorist attack

Former Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue arrives for a meeting with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, U.S., November 30, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

Former Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue arrives for a meeting with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York, U.S., November 30, 2016. (Photo: Reuters)

Sonny Perdue, former Georgia governor and nominee for Secretary of the Department of Agriculture (USDA), will finally get a Senate confirmation hearing. The Senate Agriculture Committee will holds a hearing for Mr. Perdue’s nomination next Thursday, a whopping 73 days after President President Donald J. Trump made his final Cabinet pick on the day before he was inaugurated.

In 2002, he became the first Republican to be elected governor in The Peach State in 130 years. He served as chief executive of the state from 2003 to 2011. While Georgia governor, Mr. Perdue handled a series of crises, including a severe drought in 2007 and a deadly U.S. salmonella outbreak that was traced back to peanut butter made in Georgia.

During the drought, he took steps to cut water usage and even led a service outside the state capitol to pray for rain. He also decided to relocate the state office that issues water permits for irrigation and other agricultural uses from Atlanta to rural south Georgia, where it would be closer to farmers. His nomination was widely praised across the political spectrum.

He even the received the endorsement of former Democratic Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack, his predecessor, who said Mr. Perdue “knows full well the opportunities and challenges that exist in rural America.”

Democrats lament Mr. Perdue did not place his assets in a blind trust during his tenure. He was targeted by political opposition and was the subject of 13 complaints to the Georgia State Ethics Commission while he was governor, including two were fines were imposed.

Gov. Perdue, 70, has now reached an agreement with the Office of Government Ethics that includes his family having a wealth preservation trust restructured so that he will have no say in its investments.

“I will not participate personally or substantially in any particular matter in which I know I have a financial interest directly and predictably affected by the matter,” his agreement states.

President Trump in his budget blueprint proposed to reduce funding to the Department of Agriculture by $4.7 billion, or 21% below this year’s level.

Sonny Perdue, former Georgia governor and nominee

unemployment-benefits

Weekly jobless claims, or first-time claims for unemployment benefits reported by the Labor Department.

The Labor Department said Thursday weekly jobless claims rose 15,000 to a seasonally adjusted 258,000 for the week ending March 18. The previous week’s level was revised up by 2,000 from 241,000 to 243,000.

However, the four-week moving average–widely considered a better gauge–came in at 240,000, an increase of 1,000 from the previous week’s revised average. The previous week’s average was also revised up by 1,750 from 237,250 to 239,000.

Further, continuing claims, which weekly data lags by roughly a week, showed significant improvement, falling 39,000 in the March 11 week to 2.000 million with this 4-week average down 32,000 to 2.027 million. The unemployment rate for insured workers (which excludes job leavers and re-entrants) is at a new low, at 1.4 percent for a 1 tenth downtick.

The report also includes a large downward revision to just 210,000 for the week of February 25, which is the best number since 1969. This indicates labor is in demand and another very healthy jobs report for March in on the way.

“The claims data do not suggest a clear shift in labor market conditions between the reference periods for the February and March reports,” said Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan in New York.

Released On 3/23/2017 8:30:00 AM For wk3/18, 2017

Prior Prior Revised Consensus Consensus Range Actual
New Claims – Level 241 K 243 K 240 K 237 K to 245 K 258 K
4-week Moving Average – Level 237.25 K 239.00 K 240.00 K
New Claims – Change -2 K -6 K 15 K

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims

A police officer stands on duty as the union flag flies over Parliament at half-mast. (Photo: Reuters)

A police officer stands on duty as the union flag flies over Parliament at half-mast. (Photo: Reuters)

British Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed the man behind the terrorist attack at the UK Parliament was previously investigated for Islamic extremism.

“What I can confirm is that the man was British-born and that some years ago he was once investigated by MI5 in relation to concerns about violent extremism,” Prime Minister May said in a statement to the UK Parliament. “He was a peripheral figure. He was not part of the current intelligence picture. There was no prior intelligence of his intent or of the plot.”

Forty people were injured during the attack and 29 remain in the hospital, including seven who are in critical condition. Prime Minister May said the casualties included 12 Britons, three French children, two Romanians, four South Koreans, one German, one Pole, one Chinese, one American and two Greeks. Two of the three French were high-school students aged 15 and 16, who were on a school trip to London with fellow students from Brittany.

The terror attack took place on the first anniversary of the attacks on Brussels in Belgium.

Police arrested eight people raiding six separate locations in London and Birmingham during the investigation following Wednesday’s terrorist attack. that May said was inspired by a warped Islamist ideology.

The man’s vehicle mowed down pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before the car crashed near the UK Parliament, Emerging from the vehicle armed with a knife, the terrorist went on the attack and tried to enter the government building where lawmakers were in session. The knife-wielding man proceeded to stab the police officer and was shot on the grounds outside the UK Parliament.

Acting Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner and Head of Counter Terrorism Mark Rowley said the 48-year-old police officer fatally wounded in his brave defense of the public was Keith Palmer.

British Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed the

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