CNN: US Middle Class No Longer Richest

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A newly published study by The New York Times suggests that the US has lost its long held lead for highest average wages to Canada.  The average American earns about what they did in 2000, which on a net basis is far more than our European cousins.  But the lead we’ve long enjoyed is narrowing as others realize increases in wage, roughly 20% in past 15 years, while wages here remain flat.

While stagnating middle class wages are a big problem, no doubt, the Times article omits that it’s purchasing power not wages that impact the lifestyle of the middle class and Americans have vastly greater purchasing power than Canadians and all European countries.  You must make $52,000 in Norway to live like someone who makes $34,000 in the US and $32,000 in Canada translates to a $27,000 salary. Gas in US is $4 v. $6.50 in canada and $8 in Germany.

As the Economist reports, Americans have LESS income inequality than Canada and many Europeans on a pre-tax basis; it’s post-tax where the middle class in America fall behind. The US collects roughly equivalent tax revenue per capita as Canada and many European countries ($12,800 in US similar to Canada, Italy, UK, Switzerland, Germany), yet those governments give their middle class citizens far more for their tax money (universal healthcare, free education, subsidized childcare, middle class taxpayers). In the US the middle class ends up subsidizing far more non-social spending with social spending concentrated as welfare for the poor.   In a nutshell, the American middle class gets a very poor return on its investment from the government itself. A flourishing middle class needs a government that reinvests in its people and it turns out that poor prioritization of tax dollars (non-competitive bidding, waste, pork and continual spending on ineffective programs) come at a big cost for the American middle class.

MSNBC: Finding Funding for Your Business

monica mehta 0403msnbcMonica and NY Angels founder David Rose discuss finding funding, small business tax tips and managing innovation without confusing customers.

CNN: March Jobs Analysis

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Employers added 192,000 jobs in March, a wee bit short from consensus expectations of 200,000, but better than the rolling average of the past two years 182,000.  We passed a psychological milestone of recovering net the number private sector jobs lost since downturn, but this is about as meaningful as graduating kindergarten. Population, immigration, demographics means there are millions of people that have entered the workforce in the past five years that have yet to be absorbed. And the greatest concern for all should be the type of jobs we are creating, low wage retail, food service positions comprise a good portion of new positions filled.  And 50% of service positions hires are temporary workers.

Fox: Business Blitz

Monica Mehta0403Monica joins Fox’s Neil Cavuto to discuss gas taxes, markets and the latest headlines in business.

Fox Business: Is Elon Musk a Good Investment?

MonicaMehta0402Monica joins FBN’s Melissa Francis to talk about Tesla, Solar City and Elon Musk? Is the next Steve Jobs to risky for your portfolio?

CNN: Hiring Picks up in Feb

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Hiring picked up in Feb with 175,000 jobs added, an improvement from Jan and Dec but below the average monthly pace of the past two years.  Monica breaks down for Jake Tapper why the stock market continues to reach new highs while the economy shows only tepid improvement.  Catch the interview on CNN.com

CNN: Markets respond to Russia

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Monica joined CNN’s Wolf Blitzer and Christine Romans to discuss the impact of rising geopolitical tension to your portfolio.  Investors may see oil/natural gas and grain prices rise.  Multinationals that sell a lot to Russia (Pepsi) or have considerable interests (BP, Shell, Exxon Mobil) may also take a hit.  Also, we could see greater pull back from other emerging markets (thailand, argentina, turkey) which have been underperforming prior to unrest in ukraine and could now feel like even riskier plays. Safety plays like gold, US blue chips will benefit should instability continue.

Adam Carolla: Monica Mehta and Jesse Ventura Episode

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Adam takes a call from Jesse Ventura to talk about the future of the US government. Adam also asks Jesse what he would do if he ran for President, and Jesse talks about how life has been since he and his wife decided to live off the grid. Monica Mehta is in studio next, and the guys recall Monica’s hilarious comments about the news the last time she was on the show. Adam then asks Monica to give advice to someone looking to start a business, and Adam explains why the Jetsons ruined everything. Catch the episode at AdamCarolla.com

 

Fox Business: Business Blitz

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Monica joins Neil Cavuto and Lauren Simonetti to discuss the latest headlines in business including Macy’s disappointing earnings and broader implications for the consumer and health of the economy.

Al Jazeera America: Housing and the Economy

Monica broke down key findings from the latest Case-Schiller housing report with Al Jazeera America’s Tony Harris .   Home prices ended 2013 on a high note, up +13.6% for a 20 city composite, with nationwide prices at a 2004 level but still 20% off 2006. Price acceleration over the past 18 months driven consumers snapping up good values and rock bottom rates for mortgages.  But good deals become harder to find and interest rates rise (up 1% from LY) momentum starts to fade and that is exactly what we have been seeing in recent months.