Don't Call it a Comeback

by: Drum Major Institute

Thu Apr 09, 2009 at 09:47


For the last week or so there has been a faint drumbeat of positive economic news. Consumer confidence ticked slightly higher in March, new home sales actually increased in February, durable goods orders have increased, inventories declined, and stocks rallied. Certain "market watchers" have told us to jump back into the stock market, the media is reporting signs of "economic hope", and Ben Bernanke talked about the economy's "green shoots", prompting an online debate about recovery hosted by The New York Times.

The response to this rather superficial positive news - after all, foreclosure activity increased again in February and the unemployment rate rose to 8.5% - was necessarily swift. Paul Krugman pointed to an increase in industrial production in 1931; Tyler Cowen warned about "suckers' rallies" and what will happen when Bernanke is eventually forced to hike interest rates; the new Baseline Scenario holds that "The one positive sign is that some forecasters are beginning to recognize that growth in 2010 is not a foregone conclusion"; at Vox EU economists plotted frightening graphs showing how the global downturn is in some ways worse than the Great Depression; and a gargantuan op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on Monday very chillingly sourced both the Great Depression and the current economic collapse to a consumer debt crash. In sum, the economic picture became worse for its comparison to the titillating glimmers of economic rebound.

Drum Major Institute :: Don't Call it a Comeback
For the last week or so there has been a faint drumbeat of positive economic news. Consumer confidence ticked slightly higher in March, new home sales actually increased in February, durable goods orders have increased, inventories declined, and stocks rallied. Certain "market watchers" have told us to jump back into the stock market, the media is reporting signs of "economic hope", and Ben Bernanke talked about the economy's "green shoots", prompting an online debate about recovery hosted by The New York Times.

The response to this rather superficial positive news - after all, foreclosure activity increased again in February and the unemployment rate rose to 8.5% - was necessarily swift. Paul Krugman pointed to an increase in industrial production in 1931; Tyler Cowen warned about "suckers' rallies" and what will happen when Bernanke is eventually forced to hike interest rates; the new Baseline Scenario holds that "The one positive sign is that some forecasters are beginning to recognize that growth in 2010 is not a foregone conclusion"; at Vox EU economists plotted frightening graphs showing how the global downturn is in some ways worse than the Great Depression; and a gargantuan op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on Monday very chillingly sourced both the Great Depression and the current economic collapse to a consumer debt crash. In sum, the economic picture became worse for its comparison to the titillating glimmers of economic rebound.

This rather overwhelming - and convincing - response to the first "green shoots" of the economic crisis suggests that we've reached a significant, even threshold, moment that policymakers must utilize. Indeed, the reaction against the "bright-side-of-the-street" perspective has emphasized not only that economic recovery is probably still quite far off, but that recovery itself will occur first (and of necessity) with increased production and business activity, while unemployment rates continue to rise and households remain cash-strapped and equity poor.

Policy action is necessary now particularly because the response to the economic (and financial) crisis has been so swift and (somewhat) robust, at least compared to the Great Depression (as the economists graph at Vox EU) and at least compared to Europe (as Tyler Cowen notes in the Wilson Quarterly). Now that much political juice has been expended passing the first stimulus package packed with tax cuts and bailing out various financial institutions, there seems to be little desire left to assist ordinary households.

But as many as 700,000 people are set to exhaust already extended unemployment benefits even as the unemployment/underemployment rate reaches 15.6%. Rising unemployment increases the ranks of the uninsured and further burdens public programs like Medicaid and SCHIP that are already facing funding cuts. There has been no discussion of what to do to assist the uninsured during the economic downturn and before health care reform actually takes effect. Indeed, consensus makers in the Senate stripped significant extensions of health insurance benefits to unemployed workers from the original stimulus package. The Obama housing plan has not had time to work yet, but the most direct measures to help homeowners (and punish banks) - like extending bankruptcy modification to primary residences and actually forcing principal write downs - have not been taken.

This is really to say that the economic outlook for ordinary households is bleak. But the significant pushback to the first murmurs about recovery provide an opportunity for policymakers to make several short-term improvements, including further extended unemployment benefits, monitoring and further incentivizing unemployment insurance programs that expand benefits to former part-time workers, and bridge insurance programs for the unemployed.

One hopes that these misery-reducing policies are palatable to politicians. Unfortunately, economic recovery probably demands much, much more.


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The real economy (0.00 / 0)
The "market" is not the economy.  With the official unemployment rate at 8.5% and the real figure well over 10% (counting "discouraged workers like we did before 1986), the comeback has not percolated down to real people.

Otoh, each of the last recessions lasted between 22 and 25 months.  That would make January 2010 the official end of this recession.  The end is actual an upward move.

Only two (or three) downturns in the country's history have been really long lasting.  The Great Depression (probably around 12 years), the Panic of 1893 (6 years) and possibly the Panic of 1837 (around 5 years i six or seven but that excludes some up periods).  

If I had to guess this may go three bit not five years,  Hope I'm right.


Unemployment (0.00 / 0)
is the last thing to recover.  In general the first thing to turn is the stock market.  The lag between the stock market recovery and economic growth returning and declines in unemployment can be pretty long.



[ Parent ]
Not Exactly (4.00 / 3)
Unemployment certainly lags.  But the stock market didn't fully recover after the Great Depression until 1954, even though GDP growth had been restored by 1933.  Thus, the question of whether this is "ordinary recession"-like or something more severe is really crucial to whether stock market comes back early or not.

I'd say odds are this recent stock rally doesn't last.  The world economic situation doesn't look good at all to me. Recovery by the end of 2010 looks far too optimistic, and the Dem establishment expecting a free lunch in the midterm elections is cruising for a bruising.  A progressive insurgency in the primaries could be the party's salvation, tho.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


[ Parent ]
This is not the Great Depression (0.00 / 0)
yet.  GDP went down by over 30% in the depression: we aren't close to that.

Most recessions have seen the following pattern:
*The stock market increases
*Growth returns
*Unemployment goes down.

I am significantly more optimistic about the economy than most here.  


[ Parent ]
Two words (0.00 / 0)
Income distribution. (If Washington and New York have their way, that will still suck, no matter what. And why shouldn't they have their way? What was good for Mexico or Colombia should be just fine for us too, no?)

[ Parent ]
Excellent Post (4.00 / 2)
This is all quite obvious from the history of the Great Depression; but then, if those lessons hadn't been forgotten and/or ignored, we'd never have gotten into this mess in the first place.  And thus, the re-learning process is central to the recovery process.

As this post makes clear, while there's been a good expert "don't believe the hype" response to various bits of "good news", there's been very, very little done to help those on the bottom (all 80%+ of us), and that is the gap that needs filling.  The worst obstacles here and now are the neolib/centrist/"buisiness-friendly" Dems, and the handful of "moderate Republicans" who love them.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


Green shoots and leaves (us hanging) (0.00 / 0)
Snicker.

I am in earnest -- I will not equivocate -- I will not excuse -- I will not retreat a single inch -- AND I WILL BE HEARD.  

this is Open Left (0.00 / 0)
All glimmers of hope must be stamped out, at once.  I especially like the reference to Krugman with his 'industrial production went up in 1931' ... and don't you dare forget it, hopemeisters!!!  By definition, all those who see hope are wrong; all those who see doom are correct, because Obama/Summers/Geithner are obviously corrupt and incompetent.  The sooner was all see this, the better.  Oh my God, I said 'better'!  I apologize!

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