Friday, October 27, 2006

 

The economy is strong! Oh wait...no it isn't

From The Economist:

The American economy

Slow road ahead

Oct 26th 2006 WASHINGTON, DC

From The Economist print edition

America's long-term potential rate of growth is falling, perhaps to its lowest pace in over a century

EVERYONE knows that America's economy is slowing. Thanks to the bursting of the housing bubble, overall GDP growth has fallen back sharply. The biggest short-term uncertainty for the world economy is whether American consumers stop spending and drag the country into recession. But beyond the business cycle, another slowdown has received scant attention. America's potential rate of growth—that is, the pace at which annual output can expand without pushing up inflation—is also falling. By some estimates, it could drop to 2.5% over the next few years, which would be the slowest pace in over a century.

If that happens, the consequences will be serious. Tax revenues will grow more slowly than expected. Monetary policy will become harder to manage: as the 1970s showed, inflation can get out of control if central bankers do not realise that an economy's speed limit has fallen. Financial markets will be disturbed as conventional wisdom adjusts from an assumption of 3-3.5% potential output growth, and investors downgrade their expectations.

Potential output is hard to estimate, let alone predict. That is because an economy's trend growth rate cannot be measured directly. It has to be inferred. Over the long run economic growth depends on two things: increases in the supply and productivity of labour. The growth of labour supply, in turn, depends on the growth of the working-age population, the proportion of people who work and the number of hours they put in. The pace of productivity growth depends on capital investment, improvements in business processes and technological innovation. By looking at such trends, economists can estimate future potential output.

Although it generates precise-looking forecasts, this kind of “growth accounting” is fraught with difficulty. Both labour supply and productivity growth bounce around during business cycles. The share of people willing to work may fall in a recession, for instance, as discouraged people temporarily drop out of the workforce. Once job prospects pick up, they might return. Productivity growth is usually higher at the beginning of an expansion than at its end as firms work their existing employees harder before hiring new people. As a result, potential output can temporarily diverge from its underlying trends, making it even harder to estimate.

Nonetheless, the broad post-war history of America's underlying growth rate is clear. In the 1960s potential output accelerated to around 4% a year, largely because more women got jobs. In the early 1970s, for reasons that are still ill-understood, productivity growth slowed sharply, pulling down the trend rate of growth. Between the mid-1970s and mid-1990s America's economic speed limit was about 3%. Around half that growth came from an expanding workforce; the other half from productivity growth.

Read the rest here


Comments:
How can anyone say the Bush economy isn't wonderful.

Just don't ask the thousands of Ford and Visteon workers who either have to take buyouts or lose thousands a year in wages.

Just don't ask the Delphi workers whose employer filed bankruptcy on its U.S. operations so they could force thousands into early buyouts, thousands more into $9-$14 hour jobs with no benefits, while their China operations are operating at record levels.

Just don't ask Chrysler workers whose employer is losing money at record levels, and their jobs are also in jeopardy.

Just don't ask realtors, construction workers and electricians whose jobs and wages are dropping off like flies because the Bush economy has slowed the housing market.

You can ask those executives in Big Oil, Walmart, pharmeuticals, and defense executives, who are reaping record wages and bonuses from the Bush economy.
 
Yup, Big Business and it's owners are doing fantastic in Bush's economy! Oh, but the little guys. You know, the poor and middle class...they're hurting. Tax cuts to help out? Oh funny! Just a loan each year isn't it? Then there's gas prices...a tax to the consumer and major profits to Big Oil! Prices in food has gone up but you can't convince the morons who support Bush of that. Nope, the average Americans has more money going out of their pockets than they do going into their accounts.

A financial crash is coming and those who are on the inside with the Bush Pigs will be alerted right before it does and will cash out. Who will be left holding the bag again? Americans....average Americans.

Meanwhile, Jenna Bush goes to Paraguay to purchase over 90,000 acres of land for her father and family. Hmmmmm...going to run to the land that all fascist terrorists run to...to hide from the masses after they've destroyed America and stolen the loot? YUP!!!!

Pigs. Pigs. Pigs. Spit.
 
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