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How strong is the American economic recovery,
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and how sustainable is it?
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We have had a number of pieces of excellent economic news
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in recent weeks, the most important of which
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is a sustained decline in unemployment,
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with some two million Americans returning
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to work in May and another three million in June.
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This is fantastic.
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But there is a disturbing undercurrent in the data.
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Almost all of the jobs that were created in May and June
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were the result of the reversal of temporary layoffs
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in industries like restaurants and hospitality.
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The trend in permanent layoffs is
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pointing the opposite direction, with some two million Americans
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losing their jobs permanently in those two months.
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So which is the more indicative and important trend, the fall
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in temporary unemployment or the slow increase
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in permanent unemployment?
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The recent spike in Covid-19 cases around the country
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might suggest that the fall in temporary employment
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is a fluke driven by the premature reopenings
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of several states.
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The stock market, however, does not think so.
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It remains near its highs and has
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responded to the news of rising caseloads with a shrug.
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But once again, in another corner of the market,
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there is a more negative counter-narrative.
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Bond yields are flat on their backs, which
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is, at least traditionally, an indication
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of very low expectations for economic growth.
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And real or inflation-adjusted yields
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are even lower, as inflation expectations
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have been picking up.
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You can see those expectations and some investors' underlying
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worries in the rising price of that old safe haven - gold.
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So as with the unemployment numbers,
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you have a choice of trends, the cheerful stock market
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or the gloomy bond market.
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One way to resolve this apparent contradiction
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is to lay it all at the feet of the Federal Reserve
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and argue that the only reason that yields are so low
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is because of the Fed's activism and that low yields, in turn,
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force investors to buy stocks.
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Perhaps, but the idea that the markets are simply
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dancing to the Fed's tune while they
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ignore economic fundamentals is not a very cheerful narrative
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either.