All morning, the news has been a buzz with the jump in housing starts - everyone clamoring to talk about how this may represent the rebound for which we've all been waiting. With no more than a glance at one article on Bloomberg, however, it's easy to learn of the whole picture. This is an example of the statement to which everyone has been referring:
Total housing starts jumped 8.2 percent to a 1.032 million rate as construction of multifamily units rose 36 percent following a 35 percent drop in March.
Here's the paragraph that immediately precedes it:
... a Commerce Department report showed construction of single-family houses in April dropped to the lowest level in 17 years, even as building of condominiums and townhouses rebounded. Builders broke ground on 692,000 single units at an annual rate, the fewest since January 1991.
I know; I shouldn't be surprised. In some ways it is a positive thing that those with a voice work to rally the rest of us into a [hopefully self-fulfilling] belief that the economy is indeed OK. However, when we folks like Mr. Alan Greenspan, the former Fed Chairman, and Mr. Myron Scholes, the winner of the Nobel prize in economics for his work on option valuation, both referring to the current state of the economy as the worst since the great depression, it's time to face reality.
When news reports focus only one the one part of the housing segment that is doing well and neglect to mention that the industry as a whole is declining to almost two-decade lows, then something is amiss. With the average American saving less than ever before and average American debt at record highs, the rising unemployment figures spell doom for those who fall only hear the headlines and continue to spend themselves into future financial ruin. It's time for those with a true understanding of what is going on in the economy to help those who do not.
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