John
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Shadow Government Statistics
Analysis Behind and Beyond Government Economic Reporting
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Latest Commentaries Subscription required Subscription

PUBLISHING SCHEDULE.  -- The next regular Commentary, Tuesday, September 15th, will cover August Industrial Production and Nominal Retail Sales.  A Commentary on Wednesday, September 16th, will cover the August Consumer Price Index (CPI) and broad income measures out of the 2014 Poverty Report.  A Commentary on Thursday, September 17th, will cover August Housing Starts and the announcement of the preliminary estimate of the 2015 payroll benchmark revision.  That afternoon, the FOMC will announce any changes in policy at its September meeting.

No. 750: FOMC, Producer Price Index, Household Income Subscription required September 11th, 2015
• In a Close Call, FOMC Likely Will Boost Rates, Irrespective of the Weakening Economy • If Pressures to Delay the Rate Hike Prevail, Markets Likely Face Troubling Questions As to What Really Is Frightening the Fed • Virtually Unchanged in July, Real Median Household Income Remained Below Its Level at the Formal Trough of the Recession • Although Unchanged for the Month, Headline PPI Again Was Boosted by Absurd "Mixed" Pressures from Falling Oil Prices More ...
No. 749: August Employment and Unemployment Subscription required September 4th, 2015
• However the FOMC Sets Its Policy, It Cannot Be Serious About Relying on Generally Worthless Labor Data • Month-to-Month Unemployment Comparisons Remained Meaningless, While Some 41,000 Unemployed Were Defined out of Headline Existence • Likely Downside Payroll-Employment Benchmark Revision Announcement Looms for September 17th • Full-Time Employment Level Finally Hit Its Pre-Recession High, At Least Temporarily, 16 Months After Payrolls, 4 Years After the GDP • Continued Flat Construction Employment Did Not Support Unstable, Headline Construction Gains • August 2015 Unemployment: 5.1% (U.3), 10.3% (U.6), 22.9% (ShadowStats) • Annual Growth in M3 Money Supply Hit Six-Year High of 6.1%; Monetary Base Is at a 5-Month High  More ...
No. 748: July Trade Deficit and Construction Spending, Increasing Income Dispersion Subscription required September 3rd, 2015
• Revisions to Trade-Balance Reporting Methodology Indicate Minimally a 3% Historical Understatement of the U.S. Trade Shortfall • Negative Implications for 2016 GDP Benchmark Revisions • Narrowing of the Headline July Trade Deficit Had Positive Implications for Third-Quarter GDP Reporting • Inflation Jump Accounted for Bulk of Gain in July Construction Spending • Fed Games-Playing and the Employment Report More ...
No. 747: Revised Second-Quarter GDP Subscription required August 27th, 2015
• Gross Domestic Income (GDI) Confirmed Stagnant First-Half Economy, Largely Consistent with Reporting of Industrial Production and Real-Retail Sales • Upside Revision to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Was Unstable and Nonsensical • Second-Quarter GDP Now Shows Above-Average Economic Growth; Headline First-Quarter Activity Was Stagnant • GDI Activity Was Stagnant in Both First- and Second-Quarter Reporting • GDP and GDI Are Theoretical Equivalents and Equally Legitimate Measures of Broad U.S. Economic Activity  More ...
No. 746: July Durable Goods Orders, New- and Existing-Home Sales, Market Turmoil Subscription required August 26th, 2015
• Financial-Market Turmoil Heralds Likely Systemic Instabilities • July Durable Goods Orders Fell Year-to-Year for Sixth Straight Month, Irrespective of Considerations for Commercial Aircraft Orders or Inflation • Flat-to-Minus Real Orders Continued Below the Peak Activity Seen before Both the 2001 and 2007 Formal Recessions • A Decade of Collapsed Housing Activity: New- and Existing-Homes Sales Still Down Respectively by 63% (-63%) and 23% (-23%) from Pre-Recession Peaks in June/July 2005 More ...
No. 745: July CPI, Real Retail Sales and Earnings, Recession and the FOMC Subscription required August 19th, 2015
• Unfolding "New" Recession Likely Will Override the Impact of Any Fed Action, Inaction or Continued Befuddlement • Down in Second-Quarter 2015, Real Earnings Are on Track for Third-Quarter Decline • Monthly Real Retail Sales Rose by 0.4% in July, with Annual Growth Still Signaling Recession • July Annual Inflation: 0.2% (CPI-U), -0.3% (CPI-W), 7.8% (ShadowStats) More ...
No. 744: July Housing Starts Subscription required August 18th, 2015
• Housing Starts Activity Still Is Down 47% (-47%) from Its Pre-Recession High • July Starts Continued in a Smoothed Pattern of Low-Level Stagnation, Despite Ongoing Volatile Reporting and Upside Revisions • Difficult to Support an Annualized Quarterly Housing-Starts Surge of 94.8% With an Annualized Quarterly Decline of 3.5% (-3.5%) in Related Residential-Construction Employment More ...
No.743: Global Currency Instabilities, Oil Industry, July Retail Sales, Production and PPI Subscription required August 17th, 2015
• Artificial U.S. Dollar Surge of the Last Year Has Reflected Faux Economic Strength, Manipulations and a Duplicitous Fed; It Also Has Distorted Global Economies, Financial Markets and Systems • U.S. Oil and Gas Exploration Has Fallen 55% since Last September, Clobbered by a Strong Dollar and Low Oil Prices • Headline Production and Manufacturing Bounce in July 2015 Was Helped by Downside Revisions to Already-Contracting Second-Quarter Activity • July Retail Sales Gain Will Be Softened in Real Terms, Net of Inflation • Rising Headline PPI Construction Inflation Will Weaken Real Construction Spending Growth • "New" Recession Continues to Unfold More ...
No. 742: SPECIAL COMMENTARY - A WORLD INCREASINGLY OUT OF BALANCE Subscription required August 10th, 2015
• Heavy Flight from U.S. Dollar Remains Likely in Year Ahead; Underlying Perceptions and Fundamentals Already Are Shifting • Economic Reality Has Begun to Overtake Illusion; No Economic Recovery Is Likely This Decade • Global Financial, Economic and Political Instabilities Are Pushed to Limits • Long-Range U.S. Sovereign-Solvency Issues Remain Unresolved • Gold and Silver Prices Will Explode in Flight from Dollar; Oil Prices Will Spike • Soaring U.S. Inflation Should Accompany Dollar Demise, Precursor to Domestic Hyperinflation • Physical Precious Metals Remain Best Inflation Hedge and Store of Wealth, Irrespective of Central Bank Gold-Price Manipulations  More ...
No. 741: July Employment and Unemployment, Money Supply M3 Subscription required August 7th, 2015
• July Employment Detail Showed a Sub-Par Jobs Gain, with the Internal BLS Payroll-Growth Trend Falling below 200,000 for August • Suggestions of a Pending Downside Payroll-Benchmark Revision • Still No Full Recovery for Full-Time Employment • Flat Construction Employment Did Not Confirm the Reported Construction-Spending Boom • July 2015 Unemployment: 5.3% (U.3), 10.4% (U.6), 23.0% (ShadowStats) • M3 Money Supply Resurgent, July Annual Growth Jumped to 5.6% from 5.2% in June More ...
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John Williams'
"Shadow Government Statistics"

johnwilliams@shadowstats.com
Tel: (415) 512-7701

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Some Biographical & Additional Background Information

Walter J. "John" Williams was born in 1949. He received an A.B. in Economics, cum laude, from Dartmouth College in 1971, and was awarded a M.B.A. from Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration in 1972, where he was named an Edward Tuck Scholar. During his career as a consulting economist, John has worked with individuals as well as Fortune 500 companies.

Although I am known formally as Walter J. Williams, my friends call me “John.” For 30 years, I have been a private consulting economist and, out of necessity, had to become a specialist in government economic reporting.

One of my early clients was a large manufacturer of commercial airplanes, who had developed an econometric model for predicting revenue passenger miles. The level of revenue passenger miles was their primary sales forecasting tool, and the model was heavily dependent on the GNP (now GDP) as reported by the Department of Commerce.  Suddenly, their model stopped working, and they asked me if I could fix it. I realized the GNP numbers were faulty, corrected them for my client (official reporting was similarly revised a couple of years later) and the model worked again, at least for a while, until GNP methodological changes eventually made the underlying data worthless.

That began a lengthy process of exploring the history and nature of economic reporting and in interviewing key people involved in the process from the early days of government reporting through the present. For a number of years I conducted surveys among business economists as to the quality of government statistics (the vast majority thought it was pretty bad), and my results led to front page stories in 1989 in the New York Times and Investors Daily (now Investors Business Daily), considerable coverage in the broadcast media and a joint meeting with representatives of all the government's statistical agencies.  

Nonetheless, the quality of government reporting has deteriorated sharply in the last couple of decades. Reporting problems have included methodological changes to economic reporting that have pushed headline economic and inflation results out of the realm of real-world or common experience.

Over the decades, well in excess of 1,000 presentations have been given on the economic outlook, or on approaches to analyzing economic data, to clients—large and small—including talks with members of the business, banking, government, press, academic, brokerage and investment communities. I also have provided testimony before Congress (details here).

An old friend—the late-Doug Gillespie—asked me some years back to write a series of articles on the quality of government statistics.  The response to those writings (the Primer Series available at the top-center of this page) was so strong that we started ShadowStats.com (Shadow Government Statistics) in 2004.  The newsletter is published as part of my economic consulting services. — John Williams

 


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