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Reince-Priebus

RNC Chair Reince Priebus speaks to the debate crowd before the CNBC Republican presidential debate in Boulder, Colorado, on Oct. 29, 2015.

RNC Chair Reince Priebus announced Friday that he is “suspending the partnership” with NBC News for an upcoming February debate, replacing them with National Review. Priebus broke the news in a letter to NBC News Chairman Andrew Lack–viewable in full below–following the blatantly bias CNBC Republican debate in Boulder, Colorado on Wednesday.

“The RNC’s sole role in the primary debate process is to ensure that our candidates are given a full and fair opportunity to lay out their vision for America’s future. We simply cannot continue with NBC without full consultation with our campaigns,” Priebus said in the letter. “The CNBC network is one of your media properties, and its handling of the debate was conducted in bad faith.”

Priebus insisted they would still have a debate on Feb. 26, which will now be hosted by the conservative National Review. In a statement, NBC called the move a “disappointing development” but also promised the network would “work in good faith to resolve this matter with the Republican Party.” However, bias aside, PPD can confirm that NBC flat-out lied to the RNC regarding formats and other debate negotiations.

That’s not, of course, to discount the bias, which was worn on the sleeves of the moderators. Criticism of the moderators and the network has been widespread, ranging from complaints of bias to simply provoking a free-for-all that never materialized. But there were multiple instances of blatant bias and dishonesty. Most notably, CNBC moderator John Harwood flat-out lied not once but twice, badly damaging his credibility with the public and mediates, alike.

First, during an exchange with Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Harwood claimed (repeatedly) that the senator’s tax plan offers breaks weighted toward the rich. Despite Rubio correcting him and the record multiple times, and even pointing out that he had made those claims prior only to be forced to tweet a retraction, Harwood insisted that the Tax Foundation was on his side.

Then, during his closing statements, Donald Trump touted how he renegotiated the time and terms of the CNBC debate as an example of how he could get America winning again. Harwood denied Trump’s claim, stating that the debate was always slated for two hours. Again, that’s simply not true.

Priebus said in an interview Thursday on Fox News’ “Hannity” that he shared the campaigns’ frustration and vowed change was in the air.

“I just can’t tell you how pissed off I am. … What was delivered [on Wednesday] was just nothing but a crap sandwich,” Priebus said. “Every debate on the calendar is going to be reevaluated, reset — look at the format, the moderators, everything.”

Left-leaning POLITICO first reported that the campaigns were planning to gather at an event that the RNC was not invited to attend. Fox News reportedly confirmed that representatives for the Ben Carson, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and Lindsey Graham campaigns have already agreed to meet.

Dear Mr. Lack,

I write to inform you that pending further discussion between the Republican National Committee (RNC) and our presidential campaigns, we are suspending the partnership with NBC News for the Republican primary debate at the University of Houston on February 26, 2016. The RNC’s sole role in the primary debate process is to ensure that our candidates are given a full and fair opportunity to lay out their vision for America’s future. We simply cannot continue with NBC without full consultation with our campaigns.

The CNBC network is one of your media properties, and its handling of the debate was conducted in bad faith. We understand that NBC does not exercise full editorial control over CNBC’s journalistic approach. However, the network is an arm of your organization, and we need to ensure there is not a repeat performance.

CNBC billed the debate as one that would focus on “the key issues that matter to all voters—job growth, taxes, technology, retirement and the health of our national economy.” That was not the case. Before the debate, the candidates were promised an opening question on economic or financial matters. That was not the case. Candidates were promised that speaking time would be carefully monitored to ensure fairness. That was not the case. Questions were inaccurate or downright offensive. The first question directed to one of our candidates asked if he was running a comic book version of a presidential campaign, hardly in the spirit of how the debate was billed.

While debates are meant to include tough questions and contrast candidates’ visions and policies for the future of America, CNBC’s moderators engaged in a series of “gotcha” questions, petty and mean-spirited in tone, and designed to embarrass our candidates. What took place Wednesday night was not an attempt to give the American people a greater understanding of our candidates’ policies and ideas.

I have tremendous respect for the First Amendment and freedom of the press. However, I also expect the media to host a substantive debate on consequential issues important to Americans. CNBC did not.

While we are suspending our partnership with NBC News and its properties, we still fully intend to have a debate on that day, and will ensure that National Review remains part of it.

I will be working with our candidates to discuss how to move forward and will be in touch.

Sincerely,

Reince Priebus
Chairman, Republican National Committee

RNC Chair Reince Priebus announced that he

consumer-spending-consumer-sentiment-reuters

(Photo: Reuters)

Consumer confidence increased less than expected in October as wealthier households grow more concerned about volatility in financial markets.

The University of Michigan final consumer sentiment index for October, released Friday, came in at 90, lower than the preliminary reading of 92.1. The final September reading was 87.2. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had expected the final October index would edge up to 92.5.

The index climbed to 96.1 as recently as June, but signs of slower economic growth in the U.S. and turmoil abroad had eroded confidence. September’s measure was the lowest in 11 months.

“The entire October rebound from September was due to gains in confidence among lower income households, while confidence among households with incomes in the top third of the income distribution retreated a bit due to concerns about financial markets,” said Richard Curtin, Surveys of Consumers chief economist. “Nonetheless, the overall impact from volatile stock prices has been quite small.”

However, Mr. Curtin stressed how the overall impact from market volatility has been relatively small.

“Indeed, the average level of the Sentiment Index thus far in 2015 (93.1) is higher than any other year since 2004 (95.2). More importantly, future financial prospects were viewed more favorably by all households in October than anytime since 2007,” he said. “In addition, the expected long term inflation rate dropped to the lowest level in over a quarter century.”

The report comes as the Commerce Department said Thursday that third-quarter U.S. gross domestic product slowed to an annualized pace of 1.5%, down from 3.9% in the second quarter. Economists had forecast a 1.6% growth rate for the world’s soon-to-be second largest economy, but consumer spending saved the quarter from contraction. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of all U.S. economic activity, gained at 3.2% in the third quarter, though it was still a slowdown from the 3.6% gain during the prior three months.

“While these favorable trends will keep the pace of growth in consumer spending at 2.9% in 2016, consumers will continue to make increases in their buying plans contingent on the availability of price discounts and low interest rates,” Curtin added. “Indeed, it was consumers’ disappointment with available price discounts that was responsible for the small retrenchment in confidence in the last half of October.”

Final Results for October 2015

Oct Sep Oct M-M Y-Y
2015 2015 2014 Change Change
Index of Consumer Sentiment 90.0 87.2 86.9 +3.2% +3.6%
Current Economic Conditions 102.3 101.2 98.3 +1.1% +4.1%
Index of Consumer Expectations 82.1 78.2 79.6 +5.0% +3.1%
Next data release: November 13, 2015 for Preliminary November data at 10am ET

The University of Michigan final consumer sentiment

Midwest-Auto-manufacturing-factory

Auto manufacturing plant and worker in Midwest. (Photo: Reuters)

The Chicago Business Barometer, the Chicago PMI gauge of Midwest manufacturing activity, unexpectedly increased to 56.2 from 48.7 in September. The survey conducted by the Institute for Supply Management-Chicago came in at its highest level since January, though economists polled by The Wall Street Journal forecast a modest gain to 49.0.

Readings above 50 indicate expansion and readings below indicate contraction, which is where the Chicago PMI has been five times already this year. It also unexpectedly dropped below 50 last month.

“The disappointing September data look more like an aberration than the start of a trend, and the October results mark a good start to the final quarter of the year,” said Philip Uglow, Chief Economist of MNI Indicators. “Respondents were optimistic that orders will continue to pick-up, consistent with an acceleration in economic activity in Q4.“

However, the U.S. manufacturing sector as a whole has been struggling badly over the previous year. Recently reported regional and nationwide manufacturing data more than suggest manufacturing activity in the Midwest is the outlier, not the norm.

The New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State Manufacturing Survey remained stuck in contraction in October, declining for a third consecutive month, while the Philadelphia Federal Reserve said the Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey showed continued contraction in the mid-Atlantic region. The Commerce Department reported that durable goods orders fell 1.2% from the prior month, matching economists’ pessimistic estimates.

Business activity across the Midwest snapped back in October and rose to its best level since January after contracting last month, according to a report released Friday.

Production (+20 to 63.4) and new orders (+10 to 59.4) rebounded back into positive territory, but employment fell back to just above 50 in October, with demand for labor down significantly on a year-over-year basis. Some comments pointed to continued issues sourcing qualified workers. Firms also reported significant growth in inventories, which contributed in no small part to the bounce back in October. Order backlogs fell to 45.5, which is a bit concerning considering employment lags orders. Absent that result, there would be solid reason for optimism on future employment.

The Chicago Business Barometer, the Chicago PMI

Mitch-McConnell-Independence-Hall

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., speaks at Independent Hall on October 26, 2015. (Photo: AP)

While the American people were sleeping, the Senate passed the two-year budget deal negotiated with the White House, increasing spending by $80 billion over the remainder of President Obama’s tenure. The bill will now go to the president for his signature.

The final 64-35 vote, which occurred just after 3 a.m. EDT, saw Democrats join up with big spending Republican defense hawks despite the best efforts of GOP presidential candidates, including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. The bill was sold as a way to avert a debt default, avoiding a partial government shutdown and minor entitlement reform.

“This deal represents the worst of Washington culture,” said Sen. Paul, who vowed to lead the filibuster against what he called an “unholy compromise between right and left that is spending us into an oblivion.”

Sen. Cruz said the Republican majority, which was just elected into office by the American people on the promise to stop out of control spending in D.C., had given Obama a “diamond-encrusted, glow-in-the-dark Amex card” for government spending.

“It’s a pretty nifty card,” Cruz said. “You don’t have to pay for it, you get to spend it and it’s somebody else’s problem.”

Outgoing House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said it was a “good deal” juxtaposed to the alternative, which was another continuing resolution (CR) and potential shutdown showdown with the president. Obama became the first modern president to veto a defense bill in order to squeeze the GOP for more spending. Ultimately, as Boehner said in a press conference on Tuesday, the deal aimed to “clean the barn” for the new House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and avoid big fights with conservatives, who are furious.

“House Speaker John Boehner is a lame duck so he has nothing to lose, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is desperate to avoid any confrontation with Democrats before the next election,” Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli said in an email Wednesday morning. “This is exactly why so many Americans disapprove of the GOP leadership. Instead of fighting for less government and more freedom, the Republican establishment is more interested in political posturing.”

The 144-page deal, which was just written late Monday, was pushed through in less than 100 hours. That works out to more than $1 billion in new spending for every hour the bill was available for research, discussion and debate, or $558 million per page. However, the debt ceiling increase represents a far greater amount. In fact, the 16-month debt limit pass would work out to more than $1 trillion in new borrowing — or $13 billion for each hour Congress considered the bill.

Democrats, across the board, praised the deal starting with the White House. President Obama said the deal will “break the cycle of shutdowns and manufactured crises” that he and Congress have been through the last few years.

“This agreement will strengthen the middle class by investing in education, job training and basic research. It will keep us safe by investing in our national security,” he said.

Vermont Sen. Bernard Sanders, a self-proclaimed socialist running against frontrunner Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination, also voted for the deal. Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said the GOP candidates who opposed the debt hike had shown they weren’t up to winning the White House.

“Raising the debt limit and passing a budget are non-negotiable responsibilities of our leadership,” she said. “Our constituents elect us to be their voice and their vote, not to play politics for political gain. There is nothing presidential about failing to pay your bills and jeopardizing our standing in the world economy.

However, according to a new AP-GfK poll, 50% of Americans believe Congress should only increase federal borrowing authority if government spending is substantially cut, 11 percent believe the debt limit should not be raised under any circumstances, and only 35% believe the debt limit should be raised by itself with no guaranteed spending cuts. But that is not at all what this bill will do or what it was designed to do.

The budget deal eliminates the caps mandated in the Budget Control Act, sometimes referred to as sequestration, regarding the appropriated spending by $50 billion in 2016 and $30 billion in 2017. The increase is evenly divided between defense and domestic spending, illustrating the “unholy alliance” Sen. Paul was noting. Further, roughly $16 billion more each year is tacked on as inflated war spending is also evenly split between the Defense and State departments.

The cuts hit Medicare payments for outpatient services provided by certain hospitals and an extension of a 2% cut in Medicare payments to doctors through the end of a 10-year budget. In reality, it is just a cut in the rate of increased payment amounts and whatever savings are already used on domestic and discretionary spending. There’s also a cut to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and from a Justice Department fund for crime victims that involves assets seized from criminals.

That money, as well, will also be appropriated in domestic spending.

While the American people were sleeping, the

Republican Presidential Candidates Hold Third Debate In Colorado

BOULDER, CO – OCTOBER 28: Presidential candidates Ohio Governor John Kasich (L-R), Mike Huckabee, Jeb Bush, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Ted Cruz (R-TX), New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) take the stage at the CNBC Republican Presidential Debate at University of Colorados Coors Events Center October 28, 2015 in Boulder, Colorado. Fourteen Republican presidential candidates are participating in the third set of Republican presidential debates. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

I dedicate the lead of this column to thanking CNBC for displaying its rank liberal bias in last night’s GOP presidential debate for all the world to see.

In relative terms, “all the world” is not that far off if you consider last night’s audience size compared with the network’s usually paltry ratings. The more people who saw this charade from the network’s alleged moderators the better for America.

My first reaction as this spectacle unfolded was muted outrage, shaking my head that this atrophied arm of the mainstream liberal media would show its colors so overtly, without any pretense of objectivity, much less any concern about the substantive issues it deliberately ignored.

I was surprised not by CNBC’s well-known bias but that its moderators brazenly abandoned any effort even to appear as journalists, if only for purposes of plausible deniability of their bias. Their questions, to a man (and an annoying woman), were silly, inappropriate, small and largely irrelevant to the existential threats facing America today.

Every one of them might as well have said in advance, “We are here to taunt you and turn you on one another with the pettiest and most ridiculous questions, knowing that despite our constantly harping on tolerance and bipartisanship, we have no interest in getting along with you, let alone treating you with a modicum of respect. We understand that our constituents — pseudo-journalists, after all, have constituents, too — hate every last one of you, with the possible exception of John Kasich, who gets a pass because he has admirably announced his contempt for you, as well.”

These arrogant clowns had obviously done extensive, though often embarrassingly flawed, opposition research on the candidates they wanted to single out for special abuse. There is no telling what kind of basement interns came up with these bizarre, arcane and failed gotchas, such as the effort to taint Ben Carson through some tangential association with a supposedly discredited company for which he gave several speeches.

My first reaction of mild angst was soon replaced by growing feelings of gratitude as I watched the Republican candidates, individually and together, begin to hit back — hard — at the moderators for their misconduct and journalistic adolescence. I tweeted at the time, “To some extent this is like watching a Charles Bronson movie — poorly produced, but great revenge gratification.”

Early on, Sen. Ted Cruz let them have it with both barrels, showing just why he is known as a champion debater and also why he should be regarded more favorably by skeptics.

Cruz’s on-the-fly but minutely specific smack-down of the moderators, along with a noble defense of his competitors, showed that though he’s smooth enough to sometimes sound scripted, he’s not. Rather, he is truly a gifted thinker and communicator.

Cruz said: “The questions that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t trust the media. This is not a cage match. And you look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump, are you a comic book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don’t you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking about the substantive issues people care about?”

Other candidates — including Marco Rubio, Donald Trump and Mike Huckabee — similarly turned the tables back on their interrogators in a glorious display of camaraderie among rivals and a textbook example of the power of recapturing the offense from preening, pretentious, progressive prigs.

So let’s thank CNBC for unwittingly setting the stage for Republicans to show what they’re made of, the seriousness of their ideas, and their sober commitment to focusing on America’s perilous problems instead of playing games.

Indeed, the main reason I’m pleased is not that the liberal media again exposed themselves. It is that Republican heavyweights showed what they can do when they work together against liberals who are destroying the country.

For a larger lesson could be learned from this if we’d just open our eyes to it and apply it. The establishment contingent always complains that the conservative wing of our party is quixotic, chasing after windmills in trying to stop Barack Obama’s madness when it obviously doesn’t have the votes.

What the establishment has never understood is that these budget battles and other fights are not a zero-sum game. We don’t have to win every battle to ultimately win the war. Democrats realize that, as they have scrapped relentlessly for policies that never seemed possible a few short years ago but were willed into existence.

The candidates showed the power of behaving like conservatives — like adults who are no longer going to tolerate the trivialization of the nation’s enormous problems and will unite against liberal cheap shot artists interested in driving the nation into further destruction.

Can you imagine the statement that could be made if the GOP establishment would quit throwing in the towel before our battles with Obama begin and the rest of the feckless Republican majorities would unify to stop Obama? Even if they fell short legislatively, they would energize their base and the entire electorate, who would see that we are not in fact saddled with a corrupt one-party system of Beltway fat cats who have no interest in taking America back. Voters would see we are dedicated to restoring sanity, prosperity, our defenses and our sovereignty.

I am allowed to dream that our side will recapture its vision — and its fire — am I not?

During the CNBC debate, Republican heavyweights showed

By Definition, Bernie Sanders is Actually a Fascist

[brid video=”18991″ player=”1929″ title=”Dan Mitchell on Bernie Sanders and the Myth of Democratic Socialism”]

Dan Mitchell, CATO economist and PPD contributor, explained to Dana Loesch that Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders by definition is not a real socialist. While appearing on Dana’s show, Mitchell debunked the myth of Nordic economic superiority perpetuated by Sanders and other leftists.

“He doesn’t understand what socialism means,” Mitchell said. “If your an economist, the one thing you learn the technical definition of socialist is government ownership of means of productions… The Cubans are real socialists. Bernie Sanders is not a real socialist.”

Even though Mitchell didn’t say as much during this particular interview, he has explained in past columns on PPD that Sanders, who calls himself a democratic socialist, is in fact a fascist. Socialists believe in government-controlled enterprise, while Sanders and others in the modern Democratic Party expose the belief that government should highly regulate and direct private enterprise, which by definition, is fascism.

Read Also — Bernie Sanders is Wrong to Think Nations like Sweden and Denmark Are More Prosperous than America

“A genuine socialist believes in government ownership of the means of production. In other words, nationalized factories, government-run businesses, and collective farms. If Sanders believes in these policies, he’s remarkably reluctant to share his perspective,” Mitchell wrote in a recent article on PPD. “In reality, Sanders is like Obama. You can call him a statist, a corporatist, or even (as Tom Sowell correctly notes) a fascist.”

Dan Mitchell, an economist at CATO and

Views of Sens. Rubio, Cruz Skyrocket Following Third GOP Debate

Republican Presidential Candidates Hold Third Debate In Colorado

BOULDER, CO – OCTOBER 28: Presidential candidates Ohio Governor John Kasich (L-R), Mike Huckabee, Jeb Bush, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Donald Trump, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Ted Cruz (R-TX), New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) take the stage at the CNBC Republican Presidential Debate at University of Colorados Coors Events Center October 28, 2015 in Boulder, Colorado. Fourteen Republican presidential candidates are participating in the third set of Republican presidential debates. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

According to a post Republican debate poll conducted by Gravis Marketing, 26.7% of registered GOP voters say Donald Trump won round three. Worth noting, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was the clear loser of the CNBC debate in Boulder, Colorado, aside of course from the network, itself.

post republican debate

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who took on the moderators in what was perhaps the most noteworthy moment of the night, and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who destroyed Bush in a heated exchange early in the night, saw their favorables skyrocket. Now, 62% and 64% say they view Cruz and Rubio more favorable, respectively. Trump, too, benefited from the night, as 50% now say they view him more favorable than they did before and only 23% saying less favorable.

post republican debate

CNBC was the clear loser of the night even more so than Jeb Bush, with a whopping 76% saying the network’s moderators were unfair to the candidates in their questioning. In fact, John Harwood lied not once but twice during the debate; once pertaining to Rubio’s tax plan and the other involving Trump renegotiating the terms of the debate. The network is being widely criticized by the media from right to left and, at least on this issue, the pundits appear to have it right.

post republican debate

The Donald, the billionaire real estate mogul and maintaining frontrunner, leads his chief rival Dr. Ben Carson nationwide 32.7% to 22.6%, with Sen. Rubio coming in a distant third at 14.5%. However, that represents nearly a double-digit jump for Sen. Rubio since the previous Gravis Marketing Poll.

post republican debate

post republican debate

Gravis Marketing conducted a random survey of 1,504 registered Republican voters, and the poll has a margin of error of ± 2.5%. The total may not round to 100% because of rounding. The polls were conducted using automated telephone calls (IVR technology) and weighted by voting demographics. The poll was conducted for One America News Network.

According to a post GOP debate poll

Democratic Presidential Candidates Hold First Debate In Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS, NV – OCTOBER 13: Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) (L) and Hillary Clinton take part in a presidential debate sponsored by CNN and Facebook at Wynn Las Vegas on October 13, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Five Democratic presidential candidates are participating in the party’s first presidential debate. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

I periodically make comparisons of the United States and Europe that are not very flattering for our cousins across the Atlantic. Though this isn’t because of any animus toward Europe. Indeed, I always enjoy my visits. And some of America’s best (albeit eroding) features, such as rule of law and dignity of the individual, are a cultural inheritance from that continent.

Nor am I trying to overstate America’s competitiveness, which actually has eroded considerably during this century.

Instead, I’m simply trying to make the narrow point that too much government is already causing serious problems in Europe, and I’m worried those problems are spreading to the United States.

Yet some of our statist friends, most notably Senator Bernie Sanders, think America should deliberately choose to be more like Europe.

They have this halcyon vision that the average European is more prosperous and they exclaim that this is proof that a big welfare state is benign. Or perhaps even beneficial.

So it was with great interest that I read a new article by Ryan McMaken of the Mises Institute. He takes a data-driven look at the America-v-Europe economic debate.

The battle over the assumed success of European socialism continues. Many European countries like Sweden have gained a reputation as being very wealthy in spite of their highly regulated and taxed economies. From there, many assume that the rest of Europe is more or less similar, even if slightly poorer. But if we look more closely at the data, a very different picture emerges.

Actually, I have a minor disagreement with the above passage.

Countries like Sweden and Denmark are highly taxed, but it’s not true that they’re highly regulated.

Or, to be more accurate, there almost surely is too much regulation in those nations, but since we’re discussing the relative economic performance of the United States and Europe, the relevant point is that there’s less government intervention in certain European countries (particularly Nordic nations) than there is in the United States.

The only reason that they generally lag behind the United States in the overall rankings is that they have very bad fiscal policy and that more than offsets the advantage they generally have over America in other categories.

But I’m digressing.

Let’s focus on the main point of the article, which is an effort to produce a neutral comparison of living standards in European nations and American states.

…if one is going to draw broad conclusions about poverty among various countries, GDP numbers are arguably not the best metric. For one, GDP per capita can be skewed upward by a small number of ultra-rich persons.  …I thought it might be helpful to use data that relies on median income data instead, so as to better account for inequalities in income and to get a better picture of what the median resident’s purchasing power.

McMaken uses OECD data to calculate relative levels of median income.

The nationwide median income for the US is in red. To the left of the red column are other OECD countries, and to the right of the red bar are individual US states. These national-level comparisons take into account taxes, and include social benefits (e.g., “welfare” and state-subsidized health care) as income. Purchasing power is adjusted to take differences in the cost of living in different countries into account. Since Sweden is held up as a sort of promised land by American socialists, let’s compare it first. We find that, if it were to join the US as a state, Sweden would be poorer than all but 12 states, with a median income of $27,167.

And here’s the chart he described (click to enlarge). Remember, this is a look at the income of the median (rather than mean) household, so the numbers are not distorted by the presence of people like Bill Gates.

Here’s some additional analysis based on his number-crunching.

With the exception of Luxembourg ($38,502), Norway ($35,528), and Switzerland ($35,083), all countries shown would fail to rank as high-income states were they to become part of the United States. In fact, most would fare worse than Mississippi, the poorest state. For example, Mississippi has a higher median income ($23,017) than 18 countries measured here. The Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, and the United Kingdom all have median income levels below $23,000 and are thus below every single US state. …Germany, Europe’s economic powerhouse, has a median income ($25,528) level below all but 9 US states.

We could stop at this point and declare that the United States was more economically prosperous than all European nations other that oil-rich Norway and the twin financial centers of Switzerland and Luxembourg.

This doesn’t bode well for Bernie Sanders’ claim that America should be more like Sweden and Denmark.

But McMaken expands upon his analysis and explains that the above numbers actually are too generous to Europeans.

We’ve already accounted for cost of living at the national level (using PPP data), but the US is so much larger than all  other countries compared here, we really need to consider the regional cost of living in the United States. Were we to calculate real incomes based on the cost of living in each state, we’d find that real purchasing power is even higher in many of the lower-income states than we see above. Using the BEA’s regional price parity index, we can take now account for the different cost of living in different states.

And he produces a new graph, once again featuring the United States average in red, with other developed nations to the left and numbers for various states to the right.

McMaken gives some added context to these new adjusted-for-cost-of-living numbers.

…there’s less variation in the median income levels among the US states. That makes sense because many states with low median incomes also have a very low cost of living. …This has had the effect of giving us a more realistic view of the purchasing power of the median household in US states. It is also more helpful in comparing individual states to OECD members, many of which have much higher costs of living than places like the American south and midwest.  Now that we recognize how inexpensive it is to live in places like Tennessee, Florida, and Kentucky, we find that residents in those states now have higher median incomes than Sweden (a place that’s 30% more expensive than the US) and most other OECD countries measured.

And here’s the most powerful data from his article.

Once purchasing power among the US states is taken into account, we find that Sweden’s median income ($27,167) is higher than only six states… We find something similar when we look at Germany, but in Germany’s case, every single US state shows a higher median income than Germany. …None of this analysis should really surprise us.

In other words, even when we limit the comparison to Europe’s more successful welfare states, the United States does better.

Not because America is a hyper-free market jurisdiction like Hong Kong orSingapore. Instead, the U.S. does better simply because European nations deviate even further from the right recipe for prosperity.

I commented on some of these issues in this interview with Dana Loesch of Blaze TV, specifically noting that living standards in Denmark and Sweden are below American levels.

[brid video=”18991″ player=”1929″ title=”Dan Mitchell on Bernie Sanders and the Myth of Democratic Socialism”]

I also recycled my assertion that Bernie Sanders isn’t even a real socialist, at least if we’re relying on the technical economic definition of having the government own the means of production.

Statists, most notably Senator Bernie Sanders, think

Job-seekers-interview

Job seekers wait on a line to interview with jobs fair and Labor Department officials in NYC. (Photo: REUTERS)

The number new weekly jobless claims, or initial claims for state unemployment benefits, increased 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 260,000 for the week ended Oct.24. The Labor Department said on Thursday jobless claims remained close to levels last seen in late 1973.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims rising to 263,000 last week.

A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors influencing the data, and the prior week’s claims were unrevised. The latest report indicates the 34th straight week that claims were below the 300,000 threshold, which is normally associated with a fairly healthy jobs market. However, considering the weakening strength in job creation and number of long-term unemployed, as well as the number of part-time workers in the economy, the number of eligible Americans is considerably low historically.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday noted that the pace of job gains had slowed, but said “underutilization of labor resources has diminished since early this year.” The September jobs report showed nonfarm payrolls in August and September averaged just 139,000, the weakest two-month rise since January of last year.

The four-week moving average of claims–which is considered a better measure of labor market, as it irons out week-to-week volatility–declined 4,000 to 259,250 last week. That’s the lowest reading since December 1973. But the claims report showed the number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid fell 37,000 to 2.14 million in the week ended Oct. 17, which is the lowest since November 2000. But, again, the eligibility numbers are extremely low.

The four-week moving average of continuing claims fell 12,750 to 2.17 million, also the lowest level since November 2000. The four-week average of continuing claims fell 61,500 between the September and October survey periods, suggesting an improvement in the unemployment rate from 5.1 percent last month.

The number weekly jobless claims, or initial

pending-home-sales-sale-sign

Home for sale sign (Realtors) and potential exiting and pending home sales contract. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday that their Pending Home Sales Index contracts to buy previously-owned homes dropped 2.3% in September. The survey results represent an unexpected drop and missed forecasts for a 1% rise.

“There continues to be a dearth of available listings in the lower end of the market for first–time buyers, and Realtors® in many areas are reporting stronger competition than what’s normal this time of year because of stubbornly–low inventory conditions,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the NAR. “Additionally, the rockiness in the financial markets at the end of the summer and signs of a slowing U.S. economy may be causing some prospective buyers to take a wait–and–see approach.”

Pending home contracts become sales after a month or two, and last month’s decrease suggests a softening in home sales after more robust levels earlier this year.  While contracts fell in all four major U.S. regions in September, with the Northeast recording the biggest drop at 4.0%, contracts in all regions still remain above their levels from a year ago.

“With interest rates hovering around 4 percent, rents rising at a near 8–year high, and job growth holding strong — albeit at a more modest pace than earlier this year — the overall demand for buying should stay at a healthy level despite some weakness in the overall economy.”

In the Midwest the index declined 2.5% to 104.7 in September, but remains 4.3% above September 2014. Pending home sales in the South decreased 2.6% to an index of 118.3 in September and are now 0.1% below last September, while the index in the West inched back 0.2% in September to 104.4, though is still 6.6% above a year ago.

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday

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