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- Printing Money in Britain Doesn’t Work There Either
- Friday’s Unemployment Numbers: Correcting the Corrections
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| Home Sales Drop to 50-Year Low | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||
| Thursday, 25 February 2010 11:00 | ||||
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Purchases of new single-family homes dropped 11.2 percent in January from December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 309,000, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. Sales fell in every region except the Midwest, and the raw number of new homes on the market rose for the first time in nearly three years. The statistics do show that regional weather conditions may have played some roll in the drop. Again, according to The Washington Post, “The plunge in new-home sales was led by a 35 percent drop in the Northeast. Sales fell 9.5 percent in the South, which includes the Washington area.” But the snow cannot account for all of the drop when one is speaking of the a drop of this magnitude. Sales were projected to climb to a 354,000 annual pace from an originally reported 342,000 rate in December, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 72 economists. Forecasts ranged from 325,000 to 386,000. The decline is all the more striking in that it demonstrates that the decline has occurred precisely at the very time that the Home Buyer Tax Credit was supposed to be stimulating home sales. The rate of home sales is 6.1 percent below last January. It is true that the many foreclosed homes on the market probably play a significant roll in depressing the rate of sale of new homes—but the very existence that so many foreclosed homes are on the market is proof in itself that an economic recovery is still an unrealized dream. Photo: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (2)
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Bonnie
said:
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And what do you think is going to happen ... when the $8000 incentive disappears? Remember what happened to new auto sales after the "stimulus" of cash-for-clunkers? |
robert
said:
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Global warming Can you imagine how much worst the sales drop would have been if we did not have global warming! |





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