[this ignores, among other things, the key underlying problem of
excessive consumer debt in the US.]

February 28, 2007/NYT

Economix
A Recession That Arrived on Cats' Paws

By DAVID LEONHARDT

The nation's manufacturing sector managed to slip into a recession
with almost nobody seeming to notice. Well, until yesterday.

Wall Street was caught off guard when the Commerce Department reported
yesterday morning that orders for durable goods — big items like home
computers and factory machines — plunged almost 8 percent last month.
That's a big number, but it really shouldn't have come as too much of
a surprise. In two of the last three months, the manufacturing sector
has shrunk, according to surveys by the Institute for Supply
Management that have been out for weeks.

But the new report seemed to focus investors' attention on the
problems in manufacturing and became one more reason for people to
sell stocks. By the time the market opened in New York, stocks in
almost every industrialized country had already fallen sharply.

The trouble began in Asia, where the Chinese stock market plummeted,
before spreading to Europe and finally this country. The Standard &
Poor's 500-stock index ended up with a loss of 3.4 percent, its fifth
straight daily decline and its worst since 2003.

All of which raises a question that would have sounded strange even a
month ago. Is the entire United States economy in danger of going the
way of the manufacturing sector? Is it possible that we're headed for
a real recession?

For months now, the economy seemed to shrug off the forces weighing on
it and just kept on growing. But those forces never went away. If
anything, a number of them have gotten stronger. And that's the most
worrisome part of the bad news from the nation's factories: it fits
into a larger story.

As stocks were dropping yesterday morning, an economist named Ian
Shepherdson wrote one of his regular e-mail messages to clients:
"Manuf is in recession; Fed please take note." Mr. Shepherdson, it's
important to mention, is not one of Wall Street's perma-bears. When
manufacturing last shrank, back in 2003, he correctly insisted that it
was a false harbinger.

But this time, the manufacturing downturn stems from a couple of
larger economic problems. One, of course, is the housing slump, which
has caused a big drop in new construction and much less demand for
doors, windows, countertops and a lot of other things that kept
factories busy in recent years.

In recent weeks, the troubles in housing have spilled into the
financial sector. Big lenders like NovaStar Financial are paying the
price for extending credit to people who couldn't actually afford the
homes they bought during the real estate boom. With many of those
homeowners falling behind on their mortgage payments, lenders are
making it tougher to get loans.

That's a sensible, and overdue, move. But it will hurt economic growth
in the months ahead. The second big problem for manufacturers is the
series of interest rate increases that the Federal Reserve has imposed
since 2004.

They may seem like old news, because the last of them came eight
months ago, but it typically takes a year to a year and a half for a
rate increase to have its full impact. A lot of the big decisions
affected by interest rates, like whether to buy a new car or a new
piece of factory equipment, aren't everyday decisions. Only now are
some families and businesses starting to react to the higher rates.

The economic news certainly isn't all bad. The housing problems still
haven't turned into a crisis, thanks in part to interest rates that
are still not high by historical standards. So the most likely
situation is not a full-blown recession (often defined as two
consecutive quarters of a shrinking economy).

The forecasters at the Economic Cycle Research Institute in New York,
who have accurately predicted each of the last three recessions, argue
that the current slowdown won't amount to much more than a lull. By
the middle of the year, they say, low interest rates and healthy
corporate spending will have the economy growing nicely once again.

Lakshman Achuthan, the institute's managing director, told me
yesterday that he thought the odds of a recession over the next year
were less than 20 percent. Mr. Shepherdson — the chief United States
economist at High Frequency Economics, who's more bearish than most
forecasters right now — still puts the odds at only 30 percent.

But for all the attention that formal recessions get on Wall Street,
they are not really the benchmark that matters to most people. A
significant slowdown that falls short of a recession can do a lot of
damage to stock prices, profits and wages.

Only in the last few months, for example, has the current expansion
grown strong enough to give most American workers pay increases that
outpace inflation. Those raises would be endangered if the economy
were to slow from last year's growth rate of 3.4 percent to even 2
percent.

"This is going to get worse before it gets better," Mr. Shepherdson
argues. "We're in danger of slipping into something very like a
recession, if not necessarily hitting the technical definition. It
would be big enough to hurt, that's for sure."

The main message of yesterday's worldwide stock sell-off — as well as
the stealth manufacturing downturn — is that the economy is facing
bigger risks than we imagined just a few weeks ago.

In mid-February, Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, told
members of Congress that he was worried about inflation taking off.
The clear implication was that the Fed's next move might be to raise
rates yet again to keep the economy from overheating.

Until yesterday, that seemed plausible. It doesn't this morning. Like
stocks, the price of a futures contract tied to Fed policy shifted
sharply yesterday.

Before the day began, investors expected the Fed to hold its benchmark
rate steady through the end of the summer. Now they are betting that
the rate will be cut once before July and again by the end of the
year. If that's all that is necessary to keep the economy healthy, it
will be a relief.

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--
Jim Devine / "The truth is more important than the facts." -- Frank Lloyd Wright

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