False Hope in a Plunging Economy

By Dean Baker
The Guardian (UK)
April 15, 2009

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/apr/13/useconomy-useconomicgrowth

Many economic analysts have seized on several recent
economic reports to claim that the economy has bottomed
out and that the upturn is in sight. This analysis
badly misreads the data.

The first number to spur the optimism was the big 22.2
percent jump in housing starts from January to
February. That is impressive, except that the February
number was only 4.5 percent above the December number.
Looking more closely, we see that permits were up by
3.0 percent in February, exactly offsetting the decline
in January.

In other words, houses that were not started in January
due to the weather were instead started in February.
The January downturn was due to the weather and the
February uptick was therefore an artifact of weather.
Weather also explains the upturn in February housing
sales data.

Analysts also touted the relatively good chain stores
sales data for March. While sales were not great
compared with year ago levels, they were quick to point
out that they could have been worse.

The factor that many analysts seemed to miss was that
many stores have gone out of business over the last
year, while very few new stores have opened. This means
that the same absolute level of retail sales for the
economy as a whole should mean a big jump in business
for the chains.

The other item exciting the optimists was Wells Fargo
reporting that it earned $3 billion in profits in the
first quarter. This was enough to cause Time Magazine
to pronounce the end of the banking crisis.

The problem with reported bank profits is that banks
have enormous discretion over when they choose to
recognize losses. Their discretion is even larger now
that the Financial Accounting Standards Board has
suspended mark to market accounting. This means that
Wells Fargo and other banks have the ability to
manipulate their financial reporting so that they can
show profits whenever it is convenient. The losses will
appear later.

The optimists are also exited about the run-up in the
stock market from its earlier lows. This one is best
left for children. Tea leaves would provide a better
measure of the economy's prospects than the gyrations
of the stock market. Remember these are the same people
that pushed the Nasdaq over 5000 back in 2000. Most
investors never saw the housing bubble or the problems
that sank Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, or AIG. If
they have any understanding of the economy now that
would be a remarkable new development.

A more serious analysis would note that the economy is
shedding close to 700,000 jobs a month, a pace that
will almost certainly continue through April. An
economy that is about to turn around does not lose
700,000 jobs a month.

The optimists point out that employment is a lagging
indicator; the economy will begin growing before the
economy starts creating jobs and the unemployment rate
begins to fall. This might be true when the economy is
losing 100,000 jobs a month. It doesn't make sense when
the economy is losing 700,000 jobs a month.

Before the economy turns around, the rate of job loss
must slow. At this point, there is no evidence this is
happening, although the economy clearly cannot lose
700,000 jobs a month for long.

The other reason this pace of job loss in noteworthy is
that it corresponds to a substantial loss in demand. In
addition to the job loss reported in April, employers
also shortened workweeks for those who did not lose
their jobs. The Labor Department reported that
aggregate hours worked fell by 1 percent in March. If
the wage bill is falling at the rate of 1 percent a
month, then workers are going to be reducing their
consumption. This is not the basis for an economic
turnaround.

The economy cannot and will not keep falling forever,
but it takes real sources of demand to drive the
economy forward. In past downturns, a burst of
consumption, especially on cars and housing, was the
factor driving the economy forward. With the huge baby
boom cohorts having just lost most of their wealth in
the housing crash and stock market plunge, a new burst
of consumption seems unlikely. These households
desperately need to rebuild their savings in the few
years they have left until retirement.

In the short-term, the government will be the main
source of demand growth. In the longer term, we will
need to get our trade closer to balance, which can only
be done by a sharp fall in the dollar. If the optimists
understood economics, they would know that they have
little to be optimistic about at this point.

_____________________________________________

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