Mister Sunshine Predictions

Brian Wesbury is one of the more optimistic professional economists out there. He’s proud of being dubbed “Mr. Sunshine.” Wesbury is chief economist at First Trust Advisors of Chicago and his assessments on the economy are quite in line with what you read here at the Good News Economist day after day.

He even has a new book entitled “It’s Not As Bad As You Think.”

His current unpopular predictions:

1. Like the Good News Economist blog, Wesbury predicts economic growth of 5% or more in Q4 of this year.

2. His job growth predictions mirror our prediction of a return to net job growth in December with unemployment falling below 8.5% by the end of 2010.

3. On housing he is bullish as well. He says things are improving so fast that by the third quarter of 2010, there will likely be a hot seller’s market in the housing segment of the economy.

4. He also sees (like us) retail sales that are now up at an annualized rate of 7% in the last six months of the year.

5. He points to manufacturing output that is up 8% and inventories that are now extremely low. The meaning? Manufacturing has fallen behind and firms have likely waited too long to try to catch up with demand. The result? Manufacturing activity will accelerate quite quickly in coming months in order to restock inventories and catch up with demand.

6. And finally he asserts that tight credit condition claims are overblown considering the tremendous money supply. “Money is like a flood” claims Wesbury. It will find its own level and with so much liquidity in the system, the flood will find its way into the economy one way or the other. Tighter credit policy is similar to other recessions, and those non-accommodating stances did not stop those recoveries.

Wesbury summarizes, “I’m an optimist on the economy and its long history shows I’m usually right.”

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Texas Adds Nearly 70,000 Jobs

Last month we predicted that jobs growth would likely begin to return by Christmas. Now Texas data confirms that jobs growth is on the way.

Seasonally adjusted data from the Texas Workforce Commission shows that during October and November, the state’s employers added nearly 70,000 jobs. Gains were in categories such as education and health services, hospitality and leisure, professional and business services, and finance. Many of the jobs in October came from government sources, however even private-sector Texas employment began an upward trajectory in November.

“Job growth in the last two months has been encouraging,” said Ronny Congleton, the Texas commissioner representing labor.

The Texas unemployment rate dropped to 8 percent in November, the first decrease in Texas in 16 months, officials said Friday. It was the first time overall employment posted two consecutive months of gains since mid-2008.

At the national level, unemployment fell in 36 states and the District of Columbia in November.

The Texas data further underscores a 9-month linear growth trend line that forecasts a strong monthly jobs growth rate by mid-2010.

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