Sustainable Growth?
Tim Duy
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Nov 3, 2009
October is becoming my lost month. Between the beginning of Fall term and my annual conference in Portland, the month is a blur, and time to blog becomes a luxury. Now, however, I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. And we can also see the light at the end of the tunnel after this long recession, with a GDP report that confirms what everyone thought - the economy turned the corner in the third quarter of this year. Policymakers undoubtedly breathed a sigh of relief, and rightly so. That said, it is far too early for complacency; I found the underlying details less than comforting, especially in comparison to Wall Street's ebullient reaction to the data. That the recession would end was never in doubt. Indeed, the timing is almost exactly what one would expected given the steep declines in spending in the first half of 2008 that triggered the flood of job losses later in the year. Spending, consumer spending most importantly, would not fall indefinitely, especially with the benefit of significantly lower energy costs beginning in the second half of last year. Moreover, as the Wall Street Journal notes, rebuilding household balance sheets is not accomplished by just increased savings; a default can do the job much more quickly, quickly adding to household cash flow. Indeed, I admit to being surprised that strategic defaults are not much higher. The more important question is what will be the durability and sustainability of the recovery in the years ahead? The GDP report raises some significant red flags when considering this question. The consumer spending number was clearly goosed by the Cash for Clunker program and a much slower pace of inventory depletion than expected, which combined to add almost 2 percentage points to the headline figure. But auto sales have slipped back under the 10 million mark in September when the Clunkers program ended, with only a slight gain expected in October. And the slower inventory depletion suggests that firms are further along than expected in realigning stockpiles with demand, and that future improvement will need to stem from more significant improvements in underlying demand (see James Hamilton for a more positive interpretation). Growth was further boosted by a jump in residential construction, but, as Calculated Risk points out, this sector's future contributions are likely to remain under pressure from high home and rental vacancy rate. Moreover, the impact of fiscal stimulus will fade as we move through next year, and there appears to be little political will to offer up additional stimulus. Finally, note that net exports subtracted 0.53 percentage points of growth as import growth exceeded import growth. A balanced, sustainable recovery requires, in my opinion, that net exports contribute to growth. This showing reminds us of the ongoing dependence of US consumption on overseas production - stimulating consumption spending flows in part right out to the economy via imports. Recall also Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's recent warning :
Couple this with a Wall Street Journal story earlier this week:
Note also that the Europeans are growing frustrated with recent currency movements. From Market News International (no link):
The international political dynamics on this issue bear careful attention; it is not clear that the US and Europe will be able to tolerate Chinese currency policy indefinitely. But do they have a choice? Add in another concern - the jobless (or perhaps job-loss) recovery. The underlying rate of economic growth (firms look through the Clunkers boost) remains well below rates sufficient to generate job growth. Indeed, as David Altig notes, the jobless recovery is almost certainly upon us once again, and if anything will prod the Administration to initiate a second stimulus package, it will be the prospect of sustained double-digit unemployment - an outcome that will only be aggravated if Chinese policy is to take advantage of the recession to consolidate more productive capacity behind its borders. Perhaps then we develop a new dependency, with Chinese saving redirected to US consumers via the US government rather than the housing market. All of which boils down to a simply question: Can the US and global economies rebalance to a sustained, healthy pattern of growth without the cooperation of Chinese policymakers? In other words, can a Dollar depreciation against the Euro alone sustain a rebalancing? I think not, which implies that global economic stability is being supported on a very vulnerable base at the moment. How will the Fed view these numbers? They will be relieved, but have much of the same skepticism regarding the sustainability of these numbers. Policymakers know the economy is being push along by a wave of federal stimulus, and are uncertain of how much momentum would be left in that absence of that stimulus. At the same time, however, the solid GDP showing will support already heightened worries that while interest rates need to be sustained at very low levels, officials may be late to the game when it comes to reversing the expansion of the balance sheet. Note St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard:
Given high unemployment and ongoing disinflation, there will be no rush to raise rates. What will comes first is the contraction in the balance sheet - and positive GDP numbers will push the discussion further in that direction. Bottom Line: The GDP report is confirmation that the recession has come to an end. But I am not ready to breath easy - too many potentially unsustainable factors drove the boost, and too much remains dependent on federal stimulus. Until the economy can stand on its own, it remains vulnerable to unsustainable, unbalanced patterns of growth. And the negative contribution of trade to growth, especially coupled with growing tension over currency movements, is a warning sign that trade and capital flows are at risk of falling back into old and unhelpful patterns. Originally published at Tim Duy's Fed Watch and reproduced here with the author's permission. Opinions and comments on RGE EconoMonitors do not necessarily reflect the views of Roubini Global Economics, LLC, which encourages a free-ranging debate among its own analysts and our EconoMonitor community. RGE takes no responsibility for verifying the accuracy of any opinions expressed by outside contributors. We encourage cross-linking but must insist that no forwarding, reprinting, republication or any other redistribution of RGE content is permissible without expressed consent of RGE.
Comments
Can you please define what "sustainable growth" is?
Also, can there be a recovery if there's 17%+ unemployment? Is anyone looking at this as perhaps a downward staircase (or lightning bolt)?
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By Guest on 2009-11-09 20:25:32
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