Hippie approval rating
by digby
It looks as though the worm has turned with public opinion. Here’s Greg Sargent:
Time released a new poll this morning finding that 54 percent view the Wall Street protests favorably, versus only 23 percent who think the opposite. Interestingly, only 23 percent say they don’t have an opinion, suggesting the protests have succeeded in punching through to the mainstream. Also: The most populist positions espoused by Occupy Wall Street — that the gap between rich and poor has grown too large; that taxes should be raised on the rich; that execs responsible for the meltdown should be prosecuted — all have strong support.
Meanwhile, the poll found that only 27 percent have a favorable view of the Tea Party. My handy Plum Line calculator tells me that this amounts to half the number of those who view Occupy Wall Street favorably.
Sargent points out that the Tea party has been around a lot longer and, therefore, made a clearer impression. But considering how amorphous the Occupy Wall Street movement is, I think one has to conclude that it’s the name and the target that people agree with. No surprise there.
Update: if they keep this up, I think they can expect the approval rating for OWS to rise:
“If the economy continues to slow … I expect companies probably to continue to keep payroll very lean and for the unemployment rate to bump to 9.25 percent, conceivably it could go to 9.5 percent,” said Michael Yoshikami, CEO of YCMNET Advisors a San Francisco investment house with $1 billion under management. “As CFOs and (human resources) managers are planning going forward, you can’t avoid the human dynamic here. And if the outlook is very uncertain, they’re going to be very, very hesitant to make broad hiring decisions. It’s not good timing because budgets are being set right now.”
One warning sign that more belt-tightening could be ahead is that profit growth seems to be slowing down. Most U.S. public companies report quarterly results in the coming weeks, and earnings season has gotten off to a weak start.
Analysts have lowered their growth forecasts for the companies of the S&P 500 and now look for overall profit for the group to rise 12.5 percent in the third quarter, less than the 17 percent they expected at the start of July.
So, unless these companies are getting a 17% quarterly profit they’re going to lay people off?
Can we say “disconnect”?
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