Showing posts with label White. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White. Show all posts

Thursday, December 6

Rising taxes would hit middle-class spending: White House

Rising taxes would hit middle-class spending: White House

Reuters

WASHINGTON - A White House report says that if that Congress allows taxes to go up on middle-class families, consumers will spend $200 billion less in 2013.

The report by the White House's National Economic Council and Council of Economic Advisers, released on Monday, was the latest salvo by President Barack Obama to encourage lawmakers to extend tax cuts for families making less than $250,000 a year and fix a tax aimed at making sure wealthy people pay a minimum amount.

The newly re-elected Democratic president is negotiating with Republicans in Congress over the "fiscal cliff" - a combination of tax increases and spending cuts that would go into effect next year if the two sides do not reach a deal to stop it.

While the White House and Republican leaders wrangle over raising taxes on the wealthy - a key campaign promise of the president's - Obama would like Congress to pass measures now to lock in lower tax rates for the middle class, the primary constituency he courted in his re-election campaign.

"The president has called on Congress to act now on extending all income tax cuts for 98 percent of American families and not to hold the middle-class and our economy hostage over a disagreement on tax cuts for households with incomes over $250,000 per year," the report said. "The Senate has passed this bill and the president is ready to sign it."

The White House also wants lawmakers to fix the alternative minimum tax, which was set up decades ago so that wealthy Americans could not avoid taxes using legal tax breaks and loopholes. The AMT was not indexed for inflation and has to be updated or "patched" every year to avoid sweeping in millions of less affluent taxpayers.

"Allowing the middle-class tax rates to rise and failing to patch the Alternative Minimum Tax could cut the growth of real consumer spending by 1.7 percentage points in 2013," the report said.

"This sharp rise in middle-class taxes and the resulting decline in consumption could slow the growth of real GDP by 1.4 percentage points, which is consistent with recently published estimates from the Congressional Budget Office."

The CEA estimated that consumers would spend nearly $200 billion less next year as a result of higher taxes. The drop would hurt the retail industry, which has accounted for nine percent of employment growth since the U.S. recession ended in June 2009, the report said.

Tuesday, November 6

Follow the money to White House winner found

Follow the money to White House winner found

Eric gay / AP

President Barack Obama, right, and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney discuss a point during the third presidential debate at Lynn University, Monday, Oct. 22, 2012, in Boca Raton, Fla. (AP Photo/Eric gay)

After Monday's presidential debate, public opinion polls still have Republican nominee Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama in a very close race to win four years in the White House. But you don't have to wait until Nov. 6 to know who will be the likely winner of this year's election.

On Monday night, as Romney and Obama were duking it out over foreign policy issues, vast amounts of cash were moving through online betting markets to back the probability that Obama will take the White House again this November.

"Obama has 3 percent more chance of winning the election than he did before Monday's debate," said Leighton Vaughan Williams, a professor of economics and finance at Nottingham business school and director of the school's betting research unit and political forecasting unit.

Vaughan Williams has spent 12 years studying how well efficient betting markets - also known as prediction markets - forecast the outcomes of U.S. elections, starting with the Bush vs. Gore election in 2000. His research has demonstrated that when millions of dollars are wagered on events such as elections, the odds offered by betting websites tend to be far more accurate real time forecasters of election outcomes than political pundits or public opinion poll.
Vaughan Williams has watched closely this as fall millions of dollars have moved through Internet betting markets such as Betfair.com or Intrade.com to wager on one candidate or another winning the White House this November.

Obama what is always the market's favorite, he said, but money has flowed toward Romney at key moments in the race. Obama's lackluster performance in the first presidential debate increased Romney's odds of winning the election, and just before the vice presidential debate, on Oct. 11, Obama's chance of winning what down to 62 percent from a post convention high of around 80 percent, Vaughan Williams said.
Obama had enjoyed boosts from moments such as President Bill Clinton's well-received Democratic National Convention speech and Romney's much-criticized comment at a fundraiser that 47 percent of Americans are too dependent on government and see themselves as "victims", he said.

Bookmaker markets allow players to place bets on specific election outcomes. If Betfair.com, for example, showed Obama with a 6 in 10 chance of winning the election, the payoff on a $60 bet would be $40 (a player would risk $60 to win $40, with their initial $60 stake returned). Due to U.S. regulations, many sites such as Betfair.com do not accept bets from the U.S., so most of the wagering is by overseas bettors.

Following the third debate, Vaughan Williams put Obama's chance of winning on Nov. 6 at 68 to 70 percent - up from 65 percent before the debate. He compiles his odds from an average of all the betting sites and bookmakers' odds he monitor, allowing for possible inaccuracies and market manipulation. Vaughan Williams also takes into account how accurate these betting sites have been in past elections.
Vaughan Williams says betting sites of offer a far more accurate prediction of electoral outcomes than opinion polls because the average voter doesn't have any incentive to tell a pollster the truth about their voting habits, but when they are betting their own money they will tend to think hard about the choices they make using the best information available to them. The more money involved, the more efficient and accurate the market, he said.

"This is people's real money," Vaughan Williams said. "Most people who know the bet the most, but people who know only a little tend to bet only a little." "So with this very liquid market you can be pretty confident that the market is giving you an accurate insight into what is going on."

Although Americans have bet on elections since 1868, or even earlier, according to Vaughan Williams, the first serious market for betting on elections what the Iowa electronic markets (IEM), which came to the fore during the 1988 Bush vs. Dukakis presidential election.

However, the online futures market, operated by the University of Iowa, is an educational and research project. Betting sites where individuals could bet "real" money on elections came to the fore during the Bush vs. Gore election in 2000. Since then, they have grown to large enterprises where millions of dollars are wagered on national elections, and so local and state voting.

The downside of these sites is they are open to manipulation. In the months leading up to the 2008 presidential election, traders reported unusual fluctuations in bets on John McCain to win the election, which appeared to be someone trying to artificially inflate his odds.

Thomas Rietz, a finance professor at the University of Iowa who sits on the steering committee for the IEM, notes that, unlike on Intrade.com and Betfair.com, the Iowa market limits individual account sizes to $ 500. that's a small enough sum in relation to the money flowing through the market to prevent any one player from moving the market too much in any one direction.

He also notes that on IEM, punters bet on a potentially different outcome to the one they bet on when using Intrade.com and Betfair.com - which candidate will win the popular vote, as opposed to which candidate will win the presidency.

"We can compare vote shares, and it turns out we've been very accurate," Rietz said. "The average amount of difference from the actual outcome is 1.2 percentage points."

Vaughan Williams says recent figures show London-based Betfair.com has taken in some $15 million on the 2012 U.S. presidential election. The very close presidential race and the media scrutiny surrounding it could mean that some $100 million could potentially be spent on betting in this year's White House race, he said.
Betting sites have proved prophetic outside the U.S. In the British general election of 2010, the first ever U.K.. prime ministerial debate thwarted the conservative party's hopes of winning an overall majority in government after good performance in that debate by Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and at unexpectedly bad performance by the leader of the Conservatives David Cameron.

After the debate, betting sites of clearly showed a shift in betting patterns that suggested few believed the conservative party would secure an overall majority in that year's national election.

With few events as major as a debate between now and Election Day, Vaughan Williams said online betting sites will likely focus on the early voting returns, especially in key swing states such as Ohio.

"There's just one report due to come out on the Friday before the election, but unless it's astounding I doubt it will have much impact," he said.

However, any indication of how early voters are behaving will have a major influence on the markets between now and the election, he added, "especially people trading with large sums of money."

NBC's Chuck Todd reports that the third and final debate between President Obama and Governor Romney was a clash in styles, with an aggressive president met by an opponent who seemed to search for areas of agreement.

Thursday, January 12

White House Announces summer jobs

WASHINGTON President Barack Obama seeks boost career prospects for children summer.

The White House says that with help from the private sector, it has received commitments for the nearly 180,000 youth employment opportunities for the next summer and for tens of thousands more seeking.

Obama says that young people must do everything the Government record unemployment to ensure that they have opportunities to learn skills and a work ethic.

In summer jobs plan Thursday will be advertised. It is the management of the latest "we can't wait" to go to Congress initiative. Many of the positions would be unpaid for and training opportunities.

Republicans charged that the White House credit for positions in places such as CVS and Bank of America, who wanted to be created anyway.

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