[ close ]


Bg1

Spread this message with Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, or Stumbleupon, and subscribe to the RSS Feed to track articles

Our Out-of-Whack Economy and the Happy Talk Propagandists

Published 11/02/09 Dave Lindorff - Print Article
E-mail - editor@economyincisis.org

If you listen to the happy-talk folks at Treasury and the Fed, and on the tube, you'd think things had finally turned a corner. The economy grew at a 3.5% annualized rate in the third quarter ended September 30. “The Economy is Back in Gear” shouted the headline on an article by CNN senior writer Chris Isadore. “The recession ended unofficially in September,” said a reporter on NPR.

There was some mention of the fact that earlier in the week there were reports that consumer confidence had fallen, foretelling a sluggish Christmas retail season, and that new home sales slipped an unanticipatedly high 3.6% in September, when analysts had been expecting a rise in sales. Meanwhile, new unemployment claims filed during the third week of October jumped to 531,000, well above the predicted 520,000, indicating that the official unemployment rate is likely to top 10% in the next Department of Labor report due out in early November. As well, fully one-third of the nation's homeowners were now said to be “underwater,” meaning that their outstanding mortgage balances are greater than the current value of their homes. Not surprisingly, foreclosures are continuing to surge.

How to explain this seeming oxymoronic situation? Well, that positive economic growth figure, which comes on the heels of a 6.4% decline in GDP in the first quarter and a .7% decline in the second quarter, is, according to government analysts, actually largely the result of two government stimulus programs—the “cash for clunkers” program that induced people to rush out and buy a new car (usually a much smaller, cheaper and, for the car makers, less profitable one than they had been buying in prior years), and the $8,000 new home tax credit, which led a lot of people to rush out and buy a first home.

The thing about those two stimulus programs is that they don't so much expand economic activity as they push it forward. That is to say, a person who takes advantage of the cash-for-clunker program is generally someone who owns a worn-out junker and needs to buy a new vehicle anyhow, so what the government subsidy does really is just push that purchase forward. Once the program ended, sales of cars plummeted (not to mention that the bulk of the payments went to people who purchased foreign cars, so the economic boost was just for dealers in the US, not car makers). The same is true with houses. Very few people would make the decision about whether to buy a home or not based on just $8000, but the availability of an $8000 government subsidy for a limited time would lead people to push forward their plan to purchase a home.

What that means is, don't count on this “recovery” to last into next year. The cars that needed to be bought have been bought, and the homes that people wanted to buy have been bought. The car subsidy is gone now, and even extending the home buying subsidy, as the realty industry lobby is pressing Congress to do, isn't going to induce that many more people to buy.

Meanwhile it's worth noting an oddity about this “recovery” being trumpeted in government and media. The relationship between the dollar and the stock market has become very strange. If you look back at stories on these two things to 2007, before the financial crisis hit, and earlier, you'll see myriad articles explaining that the dollar and the US stock market tend to move in tandem. This was always explained as being because as the dollar strengthens, foreign investors want to put their money into dollar-denominated assets. Similarly, if the dollar weakened, analysts would write confidently that the stock market would be hurt as investors pulled their money out of US equities to invest in markets denominated in appreciating currencies.

Now, the analysts say that as equities strengthen, the dollar will fall, but if equities fall, the dollar will appreciate. The reason for this new inverse relationship should be cause for considerable alarm. Why? In fact, it turns out that the last eight months of a rising equities market has been largely the direct result of a shrinking dollar. This is because so much of the sales and earnings of companies in the S&P 500 and the much narrower Dow Index are earned overseas, denominated in foreign currencies, but accounted for on the books of these US-incorporated firms in dollars, that as the dollar declines in value, corporate sales and earnings appear to be growing. Reportedly, as much as 80 percent of the appreciation in the S&P Index since last March 9 when the market hit bottom can be attributed to the dollar's fall against major world currencies.

Financial writers and reporters on TV don't mention this tectonic shift. They just report the new relationship (Stocks up, dollar down, stocks down, dollar up) as though that's they way it's always been. But actually, this is a phenomenon has normally been characteristic of Third World, so-called “developing” economies. That since the end of 2008 it has become characteristic of the US economy should be cause for concern.

So don't be conned by the happy talk salesmen at the Fed and Treasury and in the White House, or by their propagandists in the newsmedia, who are trumpeting the latest GDP growth figure as a sign that the recession is over, apparently in the hopes that people will run out to the mall and start spending (in those remaining stores that don't have their windows taped or covered in plywood). What we've seen was a blip on the chart, engineered by a couple of “going out of business” sales by the car and housing industry.

Real unemployment—measured the honest way it used to be 30 years ago, to include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time involuntarily—is hitting 20% (for those who are bad at math, that's one out of five working-age Americans). Foreclosures are hitting a record. Half of laid-off workers are cashing out their 401(k)s in order to buy food. State and local governments, both major employers, are hitting a wall as tax collections plummet and federal stimulus funds run out. This is not the foundation for a renewal of economic growth; it is the precondition for a renewed or prolonged recession.

And if the dollar continues its slide, which is likely given the US's huge budget deficits and trade deficits, as well as the Federal Reserve's inability to raise interest rates (a move that could strengthen the dollar but which would crush the economy), all those things that Americans buy abroad which are no longer made at home, as well as the oil that is imported, will cost that much more, driving consumers further into the hole. And remember, 70% of US GDP is consumer spending, a result of our decimation of our industrial base.

Recession ending? Don't bet on it.

DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist. His latest book is “The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin's Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net

Click here to contact your Representative in Congress.

Unless the above article is already copyrighted, this article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License, EIC grants permission to use this article in whole or in part provided attribution is given, preferably in the form of a link back to EconomyInCrisis.org.

MORE OF TODAY'S NEWS | Comment on this Article | Read Comments


Spread this message with Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, or Stumbleupon, and subscribe to the RSS Feed to track articles

Register for newsletter

Bg2

Please Donate to EconomyinCrisis.org today



Please do your part, send a donation of $5, $10, $15 or any amount by PayPal or major credit card.

Bg2

Download our Podcast from iTunes

Itunes

Bg2



Bg2

Follow us on Twitter

Twitter


Download our Podcast from iTunes

Itunes

Bg2

Additional Recommended Articles from the Archives


Bg2

Follow us on Twitter

Twitter

Bg2

Donate Today


Bg2

Comment on this article

Subject

Comment



Bg2

Article Comments From Readers

biguru says "Out-of-Whack" on 11/03/09
Out of whack because wrong people are in charge that know nothing about what they are in charge of except two.

Department of Agriculture
Secretary Thomas J. Vilsack - Law

Department of Commerce
Secretary Gary F. Locke - Law

Department of Transportation
Secretary Raymond L. LaHood - Sociology

Department of Energy
Secretary Steven Chu -Biology

Department of Education
Secretary Arne Duncan - Sociology

Council of Economic Advisers
Chair Christina Romer - Economics

Environmental Protection Agency
Administrator Lisa P. Jackson - Chemical Engineering

United States Trade Representative
Ambassador Ronald Kirk - Law

guest says "Reply to "Economy will not recover until we address Global Labor Arbitrage"" on 11/03/09
The reason why people mention reckless government spending and bailouts as a problem because they are inflationary. Once a government can't borrow or tax enough, new money has to be created which leads to higher prices for everything like wages which leads to complaints by businesses and politicians that Amercians cost too much to hire which leads to the push for more foreign workers and outsourcing. The problem with the trade deficits is the protectionist agreements from WTO and NAFTA that apparently do not count undervalued exchange rates by money printing, VAT taxes on US exports, and requirements that to export in some countries you have to setup a factory with local partners so that your technology can be copied as protectionism. Cheaper wages in other countries is not a problem if there is real free trade. But we do not have free trade only protectionist agreements lobbied as free trade to confuse people. For example if a country like the US buys hundreds of billions of dollars more in goods from a particular country than they buy from us, the country with the trade surplus should have a greatly appreciated exchange rate. So even though wages still might be like a dollar an hour in that country; based on exchange rates it should be hugely more expensive to import from that country. However, since all countries have a fiat currency a trading partner can just keep printing money faster than the US does to keep their exchange rate undervalued so no matter how productive US workers are with 5 or 6 degrees each, it will always be cheaper to produce in the country printing money faster. Thats why the free market decided along time ago that gold and silver should be used as money where you can't cheat as easily like with a fiat currency for trade.

guest says "What do you expect?" on 11/03/09
The US government is best to provide a confident recovery and a positive outlook to ensure the whole
world is not going into panic mode. It is not useful to go panic and send everyone into depression. So hide it if you can whilst trying to fix it. Fix it you must but it is possible? I reckoned the quadrillion dollars financial black hole created is probably unfixable.
The 1930s depression is caused by a single factor, the share market bubble and is probably diminutive compared to the current one (multiple bubbles). What can be done is to slowly dispense the bad news
over a long time to avoid the world plunging into a depression shock. I reckoned many decades of stagnation or a fluctuation of GDP.

guest says "Economy will not recover until we address Global Labor Arbitrage" on 11/02/09
Just about everything the government is doing constitutes symbolism over substance intended to "kick the can"--the day of reckoning--a little further down the road, perhaps out past the next election cycle. In fact, our politicians and intellectuals won't even mention or identify our nation's real problems.

They are refusing to acknowledge the existence of foreign outsourcing, H-1B and L-1 visas, mass legal immigration, illegal immigration, and population explosion.

To hear the news media tell it, the problem was created by the banking industry and the housing crisis. In reality, the nation's economy has been going downhill for about a decade but was partially masked by the housing bubble. How convenient--the housing bubble made the economy look better than it was and now that we have returned to the downward slope, the housing and banking crashes are being blamed for the overall trend.

It's much easier for the news media to blame evil bankers and mortgage lenders for our nation's economic problems than to identify the real underlying causes of the overall downward trend.

biguru says "Patriotic" on 11/02/09
Be a Klingon and say it is a good day to die. That is patriotic. Or is it?

"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."

And that is unpatriotic.

guest says "Bullsh...." on 11/02/09
Seems to be that's the only thing you like to do....negative, bad things about the economy....I can't believe everything is messed up as you depict...please be more neutral....depict the bad things but also the good ones....NOT ALL CAN BE BAD....as you like to put it....be more patriotic as well....I can't believe as most of the credited economist in this country agree that the economy is finally emerging from the crisis although there is a long path to run....you still keep talking sh.....seems to be you are paid for that...be more patriotic...love your country