What Does Mr. Romney Have to Do to Defeat Mr. Obama –
Nothing – Really Nothing
In 2010 the economy
started strong and then faded. In
2011 the economy started strong and then faded.
In 2012 the economy started strong and then __________________ (you fill
in the blank).
Consumer spending
(not lower taxes, sorry Conservatives) is what drives the economy. When consumer spending, the single largest
component of the economy (it’s not government, sorry Conservatives) fails to
increase the economy suffers, sometimes greatly. With the release
of May retail sales and the downward revision of April retail sales the
signal being sent is loud and clear and somewhat obnoxious. The economy is slowing.
Retail and food
service sales decreased 0.2% last month to a seasonally adjusted $404.60
billion, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. Sales were up 5.3% year
over year.
Economists surveyed by
Dow Jones Newswires had forecast a 0.3% decline.
Retail sales in April
fell a downwardly revised 0.2%, compared with a previously reported 0.1% gain.
That marks the first
time in nearly two years that retail sales have fallen in consecutive months.
Auto sales continued to be good, but as noted here
earlier, this is largely a technical correction as consumers and fleet owners
delayed purchasing new cars for several years and now find themselves in the
position of having to buy a new car for mechanical or safety reasons. Take out autos from the sales change and
results are even worse.
Americans
bought 1,334,600 new vehicles last month, researcher Autodata Corp. reported
earlier this month.
But
activity elsewhere were mixed. Excluding autos, retail sales fell 0.4% in May,
after sliding 0.3% the previous month. May's decline was the biggest in two
years.
The politics of all
of this is also straight forward.
Mr. Romney’s main job is to say nothing specific and do nothing that
would cause anyone to look closely at his proposals, if indeed that is
possible. All he has to do is sit and
wait for November.
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