With less than six weeks to the election, President Obama is
benefiting from a curious paradox. Although the economy remains weak by
most indicators, consumer optimism has registered a distinct, though
modest, gain. The stock market is up, as are the three main confidence
surveys -- from Gallup, the University of Michigan and the Conference
Board. The contrast suggests some possible explanations: (a) the
economic indicators are backward looking and the economy is stronger
than the numbers suggest; or (b) something else -- the political
conventions, falling gasoline prices, the Federal Reserve's latest
credit easing -- has made people slightly more optimistic.
Either way, it's good news for the president. The rise in consumer optimism has coincided with gains in his approval rating and a widening of his lead over Mitt Romney in most opinion polls. Of course, there's no assurance that either will last. If September's unemployment figures, scheduled for release Oct. 5, are poor, economic sentiment -- and the president's prospects -- could reverse.
But for now, a better mood is clearly helping Obama. In September, the Conference Board's confidence survey rose to 70.3 from 61.3 (on an index of optimism with the year 1985 equaling 100). Though the index is still historically low, it has regained levels of earlier in the year. Consumers are "considerably more optimistic about the short-term outlook for business conditions, employment and their financial situation," according to the Conference Board's Lynn Franco. Similarly, the Gallup and University of Michigan indexes rose sharply in September and are now close to yearly highs.
Read more: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/09/28/for_now_a_better_mood_is_helping_obama.html
Either way, it's good news for the president. The rise in consumer optimism has coincided with gains in his approval rating and a widening of his lead over Mitt Romney in most opinion polls. Of course, there's no assurance that either will last. If September's unemployment figures, scheduled for release Oct. 5, are poor, economic sentiment -- and the president's prospects -- could reverse.
But for now, a better mood is clearly helping Obama. In September, the Conference Board's confidence survey rose to 70.3 from 61.3 (on an index of optimism with the year 1985 equaling 100). Though the index is still historically low, it has regained levels of earlier in the year. Consumers are "considerably more optimistic about the short-term outlook for business conditions, employment and their financial situation," according to the Conference Board's Lynn Franco. Similarly, the Gallup and University of Michigan indexes rose sharply in September and are now close to yearly highs.
Read more: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/09/28/for_now_a_better_mood_is_helping_obama.html
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