| The United States Will Be Just Fine |
| Written by Brian Hamilton MBA |
| Thursday, 05 March 2009 00:00 |
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There is probably something in humans and in every generation that makes us think that the problems we face are uniquely difficult. Much has been written about the economy and, if you accept certain assumptions from what you read, you might think that we are in the midst of a global depression. Yet, it is important to put the current economy in perspective. We might even try reviewing and analyzing some objective data. Last quarter, GDP fell at a rate of 0.5 percent, which means that the total value of goods and services produced in the US fell by a half of one percentage point last quarter over the previous quarter1. For the first two quarters of this year, GDP grew by 0.9 percent and 2.8 percent, indicating that economic growth is relatively flat this year, but that it is not falling off a cliff. This isn’t the first time GDP has fallen and it won’t be the last. A decrease in GDP after almost 6 years of increases is not positive, but almost predictable. No economy grows indefinitely and consistently; there are always temporary lapses. In fact, if you consider the media coverage of the economy over the past year and the consequent way people have been scared, it is remarkable that anyone is buying anything. Look at personal income today. Personal income is income received by individuals from all sources, including employers and the government. Personal income rose last quarter compared to a year ago according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Compared to five years ago, personal income has risen by 32.1 percent5. Even considering that inflation was 18.13 percent over this period, people are generally making more money than they used to. This is another one of those statistics that can easily get bent to fit a story. You often hear things like “personal income fell last month by 23 percent”, but writers tend to leave larger and more important statistics out. In this case, wouldn’t you be more interested in trends over a quarter or a year? Using isolated statistics to fit your view is something that has become accepted and rarely challenged. Next, there is inflation. The inflation rate measures the strength of the dollar you hold today as compared to a year ago. The inflation rate is currently 3.66 percent. Over the past 50 years, the inflation rate has averaged about 4.2 percent6. Inflation remains well within control. Yet, would you be surprised to read a story next month citing an X-percent jump in inflation over the last day, month? I wouldn’t be. (Ironically, the one thing about the economy that is alarming from a historical standpoint is our national debt, which gets some but not enough media coverage. We now owe $10.6 trillion and have become a debtor nation over the past several decades. We now depend on the goodwill and investments of outside countries, while we continue to spend more than we make). Now, the skeptics reading this will undoudebtly point to other (I believe, far lesser) statistics that validate their gloomy view of the economy and the direction of the country. I ask the reader: if people are employed, are making good wages, can borrow inexpensively, hold a dollar that is worth largely what it was worth a year or five years ago, and live in a country where the value of goods and services is rising, tell me exactly where the crisis is? There is no doubt that the economy has slowed, but slowness does not equal death. It is true that the financial markets are a mess (and the depreciation of the value of equities is both scary and bad), but analysts typically go too far in ascribing the fall of the financial markets with the fall of a whole economy. The markets are an important component of the economy, but the markets are not the totality of the economy. No one can say whether conditions will worsen in the future. However, we have learned that the United States economy has been tremendously resilient over the past 200 years and will probably remain so, as long as the structural philosophies that it has been built upon are left intact. Americans are hard-working and innovative people and the country will be just fine. 1 “Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product.” Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Department of Commerce. Updated 25 November 2008. www.bea.gov. 5 “Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income” (Table 1.7.5). Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Department of Commerce. Updated 25 November 2008. http://www.bea.gov/national/nipaweb/TableView.asp?SelectedTable=43&Freq=Qtr&FirstYear=2006&LastYear=2008. |
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| Last Updated on Saturday, 28 March 2009 20:36 |
| The Importance of Hiring the Very Best Employees |
| Written by Brett Owens | |
As small business owners, we wear many different hats. Among which, hiring the right people, and helping them achieve their highest potential, are two of your most important responsibilities. But which one is MORE important?
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| Review: Write-up Does More Than Ever |
| Written by Julie Lepper, EA | |
Until recently, write-up software was primarily a tool CPAs and Accountants to record the history of our clients. With the changes in the technology, it has also changed what services we can offer and makes choosing accounting software a bigger decision than it had been in the past. | |
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| Treasury to Pilot Refund Direct Deposit |
| Written by The Progressive Accountant | |
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| Tweets Be Gone |
| Written by Richard Oppenheim CPA | |
Using Twitter is a good idea, even for accountants. There are a few tools that will enhance your use of this shorthand messaging system. For example, there are times when you want to delete old tweets. This is accomplished by logging in to your Twitter account and deleting one at a time. When deleting one or two, this is easy. When you want to change the focus of a twitter and instead of tweeting about debits, you want to tweet about credits, there could be hundreds or even thousands of old t... | |
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| ADP and Division President Part |
| Written by The Progressive Accountant | |
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| Read more... | |
ADP and Division President Part![]() Automatic Data Payment has parted ways with Campbell B. Langdon, who had served as president of the major account services division for employer services, after his duties were handed off to another executive. The company did not announce the departure, which was effective June 30, but included the separation agreement with the 10-year veteran of the payroll processing organization when it filed with the SEC its annual report for the fiscal year ended June 30. News | The Progressive Accountant | Tuesday, 31 August 2010 |
NetSuite Starts Accountant Program![]() SAN MATEO, Calif. - NetSuite, which markets Internet-based business applications has launched the NetSuite Accountant Program, as the effort to enlist accountants in promoting the new generation of software is picking up steam. NetSuite's action follows the path taken by rival Intacct, which is enlisting accountants to promote and use and resellers to sell its Web-based program. News | Bob Scott | Monday, 30 August 2010 |
SEC Charges Former Dell Accountants![]() The SEC has charged Dell's former chief accounting officer, Robert W. Davis, and former assistant controller, Randall D. Imhoff, for their alleged roles in accounting fraud at the computer hardware giant. Both men agreed to pay penalties that involved Dell's alleged fraud in misstating operating results for its fiscal years 2002 through 2005. This action follows a separate settlement of SEC and accounting rule violatons earlier this year in which Dell paid $100 million civil penalty and founder and CEO Michael Dell paid $4 million. News | The Progressive Accountant | Monday, 30 August 2010 |
Copanion Names Engineering VP![]() ANDOVER, Mass. - Copanion, which makes tax workflow software, has hired Julie Pierce for the newly created job of vice president of engineering. In that position, she is responsible for overseeing development of Copanion's products. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 26 August 2010 |
Ease of Use, Mobile, Hot Tax Research TopicsWith tax research, is there really an issue that is more important than making it easier to find results? Probably not, and along with the user efforts to improve navigation and user interfaces, the effort to gain quicker access to information will increasingly include support for mobile devices. But despite the pending mobile revolution, it's more traditional improvements that matter most to users this year. News | Bob Scott | Monday, 23 August 2010 |
Mobile Apps in Store for Tax and AccountingThe mobile revolution is moving into the tax and accounting business with major players such as Intuit, CCH and Thomson Reuters readying products that make their applications accessible via smartphones. And there will very quickly be a lot more entries in this rapidly expanding field. News | Bob Scott | Monday, 23 August 2010 |
Intuit Expresses Confidence in Fiscal 2011![]() Even if the rest of the economy looks weak, Intuit painted an optimistic picture for its year ending July 31. At this week's earnings conference call, company executives said they expected overall revenue would grow by 8 percent to 11 percent, consumer revenue by 10 percent to 13 percent, and revenue from the accounting professionals segment--its Lacerte and ProSeries business--by 4 percent to 7 percent. That came as the company's earnings for fiscal 2010 topped all of Wall Street's estimates. News | Bob Scott | Friday, 20 August 2010 |
CEO Blames Intuit Outages on "Pure Execution"![]() Two lengthy computer outages that frustrated users of a broad range of Intuit applications, including one that shut down operations of thousands of small businesses, stemmed from Intuit's approach to its protecting its systems, CEO Brad Smith said today in a financial earnings Webcast. "It's was pure execution. It's something we need to fix," he commented. News | Bob Scott | Thursday, 19 August 2010 |
Former CLR CEO Winn Cashes in on IPO![]() Steve Winn, long-time president and CEO of the former Computer Language Research, has taken public RealPage, a real estate software company. Winn sold $18.2 million stock in his newest venture and his holdings had a market value of $487 million at the $16.75 per share close on August 18. The company went public in late July at $11 per share. CLR originated the InSource corporate tax line and GoSystem products, which are now owned by Thomson Reuters. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 19 August 2010 |
Sage Intros Peachtree Certification![]() Sage North North America is rolling out a program for members of its Sage Accountants Network via which they can earn certification on the Peachtree software line. Training for the program is available though the online Sage University Anytime Learning. News | The Progressive Accountant | Wednesday, 18 August 2010 |
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About the Author: Brett Owens is CEO and Co-Founder of Chrometa, a Sacramento, Calif.-based provider of software that records activity in real time. Previously marketed to the legal community, Chrometa is branching out to accounting prospects; gains include the ability to discover previously undocumented billable time, save time on billing reconciliation and improve personal productivity. Brett is also blogger and founder at CommodityBullMarket.com and ContraryInvesting.com, as well as a regular contributor to two leading financial media sites, SeekingAlpha.com and BeforeItsNews.com. |