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...following text appears within a chart. Please see hardcopy or PDF for actual chart...
...following text appears within a chart. Please see hardcopy or PDF for actual chart...
...previous two downturns that had competed for the title "worst since the Depression." Nonfarm employment has dropped by 5.1 million, or 3.7%, since its peak in December 2007. In the 1981-82 recession, employment fell 3.1%, and in 1974-75 it fell 2.8%. (Here's the comparison in chart form...
Ultimately PlaNYC attempts to chart New York's growth by vastly improving energy efficiency in the city's 950,000 buildings, beefing up public transit and adapting to the impact of global warming. Though PlaNYC is as green as a new fairway - the city is carving out bike lanes and pedestrian plazas and expanding its parks - the deeper motivation is economic. If New York wants to stay on top, it needs to grow sustainably and efficiently, getting more out of less while improving quality of life. PlaNYC could be a model for megacities from Tehran to Tokyo...
...still less than the $0.91 average banks are holding loans on their books. The Treasury Department has said that PPIP program could buy up to $1 trillion in "legacy" banks loans and other debt. That suggests banks could lose up to $210 billion on those sales alone (see chart below). Citigroup, for example, has about $200 billion in residential U.S. real estate loans. Goldman estimates that Citigroup values those loans on its books at about $0.94. If it were to sell half of its mortgage loans, Citigroup would lose an estimated $23 billion, about 15% of the total capital...