Monday, November 17, 2008

The understatement of the 21st Century: No "garden variety" recession

THE QUESTION: Recession or Depression?

Comment: Instead of asking capitalist sooth-Sayers and economic forecasters if this is a depression or a recession, maybe the mainstream media should be asking unemployed workers, those living in poverty and working class families facing foreclosures and evictions for the answer to this question.

The real question is:
Why did Barack Obama and the Democrats join Republicans in telling lies about the real state of the economy throughout most of the campaign until everything came tumbling down?


Forecasters: tough road ahead for the economy

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20081117/D94GM8G00.html

Nov 17, 7:27 AM (ET)

By JEANNINE AVERSA

WASHINGTON (AP) - The country is sinking deeper into the economic doldrums, and it's likely to stay there for a while.

That's part of the latest outlook from forecasters in a survey to be released Monday by the National Association for Business Economics, also known by its acronym, NABE.

Approximately 96 percent of the economists polled believe that a recession has started, and nearly three-fourths think it could persist beyond the first quarter of 2009.

Under one definition, a recession happens when the economy shrinks for two quarters in a row. The economy contracted 0.3 percent in the third quarter as battered consumers cut back sharply on spending, the government reported last month. It was the worst showing since 2001, when the country was last in a recession.

NABE economists, among other experts, predict activity will continue to shrink in both the final quarter of this year and the first quarter of next year as weary consumers hunker down further under the stresses of rising unemployment, shrinking nest eggs and falling home values.

"Business economists became decidedly more negative on the economic outlook for the next several quarters as a result of the intensification of credit market stresses and evidence of spillover to the real economy," said NABE president Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers.

NABE economists are now forecasting the economy to shrink at a 2.6 percent pace in the final quarter of this year and then at a 1.3 percent pace in the first three months of 2009. The new projections marked downgrades from the association's previous survey, which called for growth of just 0.1 percent in the final quarter of this year and a 1.3 percent growth rate in the following quarter.

For all of 2008, the association's economists are predicting the economy's growth will slow to 1.4 percent, down from 2 percent in 2007. If the new, lower projection proves correct, it would mark the weakest performance since the 2001.

The picture would turn worse in 2009. The NABE economists are projecting the economy will jolt into reverse, shrinking by 0.2 percent for all of next year. If that happens, it would mark the worst showing since 1991, when the country was starting to pull out of a recession.

With the economy losing traction, the nation's unemployment rate will climb to 7.5 percent by the end of next year, the economists predict. Other analysts think it could rise to 8 percent at that time, or even hit 10 percent or higher if a U.S. auto company were to go under.

The nation's unemployment rate bolted to 6.5 percent in October, a 14-year high, the government reported earlier this month.

To cushion the fallout, the Federal Reserve has slashed a key interest rate, dropping it to just 1 percent, a level seen only once before in the last half-century.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has warned that the country's economic weakness could last for some time - even if the government's unprecedented $700 billion financial bailout package and other steps do succeed in getting financial and credit markets to operate more normally.

In a speech Friday, Bernanke left the door open to another rate reduction, warning that financial markets remain under "severe strain."

Wall Street investors and economists believe the Fed probably will lower interest rates again on Dec. 16, its last regularly scheduled meeting this year, by one-quarter or even one-half percentage point.

The NABE survey of 50 forecasters was taken Oct. 28 through Nov. 7.

The raft of grim economic news prompted Sandra Pianalto, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, to say in a speech Friday that the data to date "tells me that the economy is now in a recession."

"At the moment, the signs point to a recession beyond just a 'garden variety' downturn," she said. "The length and severity of the recession will depend on how quickly credit markets return to normal."