facebook twitter google plus linkedin rss feed

Friday 7 February 2014

What Does the State of the Union Mean for The Economy? - RTA Business

Tuesday 28th January saw US President Barack Obama give his annual State of the Union address to the American people. Considering America’s role as the lynchpin of global trade, what does the State of the Union mean for the global economy?

The State of the Union speech was a tradition started by American founding father George Washington. Although it has been dropped and revived, the State of the union speech is now an American tradition. It acts to lay out the President’s agenda for the year. It acts in a similar way to the Queen’s speech at the opening of Parliament.

So what does Obama’s speech tell us about the global economy? Critics and pundits are already commenting on how Obama’s speech was one that was politically charged. It certainly was; Obama made it quite clear that he is going to bypass a Republican House of Representatives wherever he can to get his agenda passed.

This was the key overarching theme that we should be interested in. Obama has had enough of being blocked at every turn. His anger has been ignited particularly by the House’s reluctance to raise the national minimum wage.

This was the central issue as far as global economy was concerned and it played out in several ways. It is a key issue because a higher minimum wage would increase American spending power. America as the world’s largest economy is crucial to helping the global economy expand by injecting money into it. More spending by America leads to more room for business growth; strengthening economic activity around the world.

This played out directly and indirectly. Directly Obama raised the minimum wage for federally contracted workers to $10.10 an hour; a significant increase that will broaden the spending power of numerous low level government workers. It gives the American economy a cash injection.

The indirect approach was used by Obama to urge Congress to raise the national minimum wage and to urge state legislatures to do the same. He’s unlikely to get anywhere with this message with the Republican controlled House, however he could with the states. 20 of them have already done so off their own backs and with a crucial election year coming up, more may do so.

At RTA business we reckon this has a direct effect on business acquisition. A stronger global economy means more room for growth, which traditionally leads to both an expanding pool of potential buyers and rising values for business’ on sale.