11.1.08

First national poll taken after the New Hampshire primary

George W. Bush "Days Left In Office" Countdown Clock
374 DAYS 4 Hrs 56 Min













Registered
Republicans



Registered
Democrates














Jan 9-10Dec 6-9Nov 2-4

Jan 9-10Dec 6-9Nov 2-4

%%%

%%%










McCain341316
Clinton494044
Huckabee212210
Obama363025
Giuliani182428
Edwards121414
Romney141611





Thompson61019





























Top 5 Issues










Jan 9-10Dec 6-9Nov 2-4






%%%














Economy
352929




War in Iraq
252328




Health Care
182018




IllegalImmigration
101410




Terrorism
91012






















CNN / Opinion Research Poll






1033 Adults

Margin of Error (%)



397 Registered Republicans
5




443 Registered Democrates
4.5












China Development Bank is expected to invest $2 billion in Citigroup

By Reuters | 11 Jan 2008 | 06:13 PM ET

Saudi Arabian Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, Citigroup's largest individual shareholder, will inject new cash to help America's biggest bank grapple with heavy mortgage market losses, the Wall Street Journal reported on its Web site on Friday.

Alwaleed, who has owned his Citi stake since the early 1990s and helped engineer a previous rescue plan for the bank more than a dozen years ago, is likely to keep his total stake in the bank below 5 percent to avoid regulatory scrutiny, the newspaper said.

In addition, the China Development Bank is expected to invest $2 billion in Citigroup

Citigroup Inc
C

28.56 0.45 +1.6%
NYSE








































[C 28.56 ] the newspaper reported, adding other investors could inject additional capital.

Altogether, the bank is hoping to raise $8 billion to $10 billion from a number of investors, including the Chinese bank and Alwaleed, the newspaper said.

In November, Citi accepted $7.5 billion in new capital from the The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority only weeks after its former chief executive officer, Charles Prince, was forced out amid news of the heavy losses related to bad bets on mortgage securities and an ailing housing markets.

Citigroup spokeswoman Shannon Bell declined to comment.

(http://www.cnbc.com)

China 2007 trade surplus a record $262bn

By Richard McGregor in Beijing

Published: January 11 2008 07:46 | Last updated: January 11 2008 09:49

China’s trade surplus rose by nearly 50 per cent to a record $262bn in 2007, but import growth exceeded export growth in each of the final three months of the year, suggesting that the country’s controversial trade imbalance may be peaking.

In another first, the European Union also replaced the US as China’s largest export market. Sales to the expanded EU grew by 29.2 per cent in 2007, compared to just 14 per cent to the US.

(http://ft.com)

9.1.08

America’s inflated asset prices must fall

By Stephen Roach (The writer is chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia)
Published: January 7 2008 17:55 | Last updated: January 7 2008 17:55

The US has been the main culprit behind the destabilising global imbalances of recent years. America’s massive current account deficit absorbs about 75 per cent of the world’s surplus saving. Most believe that a weaker US dollar is the best cure for these imbalances. Yet a broad measure of the US dollar has dropped 23 per cent since February 2002 in real terms, with only minimal impact on America’s gaping external imbalance. Dollar bears argue that more currency depreciation is needed. Protectionists insist that China – which has the largest bilateral trade imbalance with the US – should bear a disproportionate share of the next downleg in the US dollar.

There is good reason to doubt this view. America’s current account deficit is due more to bubbles in asset prices than to a misaligned dollar. A resolution will require more of a correction in asset prices than a further depreciation of the dollar. At the core of the problem is one of the most insidious characteristics of an asset-dependent economy – a chronic shortfall in domestic saving. With America’s net national saving averaging a mere 1.4 per cent of national income over the past five years, the US has had to import surplus saving from abroad to keep growing. That means it must run massive current account and trade deficits to attract the foreign capital.

America’s aversion toward saving did not appear out of thin air. Waves of asset appreciation – first equities and, more recently, residential property – convinced citizens that a new era was at hand. Reinforced by a monstrous bubble of cheap credit, there was little perceived need to save the old-fashioned way – out of income. Assets became the preferred vehicle of choice.

With one bubble begetting another, America’s imbalances rose to epic proportions. Despite generally subpar income generation, private consumption soared to a record 72 per cent of real gross domestic product in 2007. Household debt hit a record 133 per cent of disposable personal income. And income-based measures of personal saving moved back into negative territory in late 2007.

None of these trends is sustainable. It is only a question of when they give way and what it takes to spark a long overdue rebalancing. A sharp decline in asset prices is necessary to rebalance the US economy. It is the only realistic hope to shift the mix of saving away from asset appreciation back to that supported by income generation. That could entail as much as a 20-30 per cent decline in overall US housing prices and a related deflating of the bubble of cheap and easy credit.

Those trends now appear to be under way. Reflecting an outsize imbalance between supply and demand for new homes, residential property prices fell 6 per cent in the year ending October 2007 for 20 major metropolitan areas in the US, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Index. Most likely, this foretells a broader downturn in nationwide home prices in 2008 that could continue into 2009. Meanwhile, courtesy of the subprime crisis, the credit bubble has popped – ending the cut-rate funding that fuelled the housing bubble.

As home prices move into a protracted period of decline, consumers will finally recognise the perils of bubble-distorted saving strategies. Financially battered households will respond by rebuilding income-based saving balances. That means the consumption share of gross domestic product will fall and the US economy will most likely tumble into recession.

America’s shift back to income-supported saving will be a pivotal development for the rest of the world. As consumption slows and household saving rises in the US, the need to import surplus saving from abroad will diminish. Demand for foreign capital will recede – leading to a reduction of both the US current-account and trade deficits. The global economy will emerge bruised, but much better balanced.

Washington policymakers and politicians need to stand back and let this adjustment play out. Yet the US body politic is panicking in response – underwriting massive liquidity injections that produce another asset bubble and proposing fiscal pump-priming that would depress domestic saving even further. Such actions can only compound the problems that got America into this mess in the first place.

China-bashers in the US Congress also need to stand down. America does not have a China problem – it has a multilateral trade deficit with over 40 countries. The China bilateral imbalance may be the biggest contributor to the overall US trade imbalance but, in large part, this is a result of supply-chain decisions by US multinationals.

By focusing incorrectly on the dollar and putting pressure on the Chinese currency, Congress would only shift China’s portion of the US trade deficit elsewhere – most likely to a higher-cost producer. That would be the same as a tax hike on American workers. If the US returns to income-based saving in the aftermath of the bursting of housing and credit bubbles, its multilateral trade deficit will narrow and the Chinese bilateral imbalance will shrink.

It is going to be a very painful process to break the addiction to asset-led behaviour. No one wants recessions, asset deflation and rising unemployment. But this has always been the potential endgame of a bubble-prone US economy. The longer America puts off this reckoning, the steeper the ultimate price of adjustment. Tough as it is, the only sensible way out is to let markets lead the way. That is what the long overdue bursting of America’s asset and credit bubbles is all about.

The writer is chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia

(http://ft.com)

As housing slumps, realtors quit

By Patrik Jonsson Wed Jan 9, 3:00 AM ET

ATLANTA - After three years showing houses in Atlanta's hilly suburbs, Dee McMahon is finished with real estate.

Yanking up her custom-made "For Sale" signs in her North Lake neighborhood rattled her ego, she admits. But when Ms. McMahon closed her final sale, a house in Snellville, Ga., in late November, the mother of two felt a swell of relief.

"Now I can finally get my own house back together," she says. "I'm nervous about the future, but I feel happy."

McMahon is one of thousands of real estate agents across the US wandering with mixed emotions and uncertain prospects through the debris of a real estate gold rush.

As many train for new careers, return to old ones, or wait tables until prices rebound, the plight of the real estate agent – average age, 51 – reveals the human dimension of how loose lending, raw opportunity, and self-determination produced a housing bust that has stunned the US economy.

"They've tasted success and big money, and now their standard of living has been rocked and reality has set in," says John Baen, a real estate professor at the University of North Texas in Denton. "The whole [economy] has been built on real estate. When the music stops, what is left?"

Americans are still drawn to working in real estate, according to the National Association of Realtors, which says its membership rose this year to 1.35 million. That growth in the ranks may be attributed to unaffiliated agents scrambling for clout in a tough market rather than an indication that the total number of agents is rising, the NAR acknowledges.

Evidence is growing that agents, especially in hard-hit markets like Florida, California, and Georgia, are closing up shop in large numbers, experts say.

Here in Atlanta, the number of agents letting their licenses lapse is growing at a faster pace than the number of overall licenses held. Nationally, an average agent's income dropped from $49,300 to $47,900 between 2004 and 2006. Not helping that trend is the cold fact that, according to Standard & Poor's house price index, home prices dropped precipitously in 2007, breaking the record 6.1 percent annual decline in 1991.

In Cape Coral, Fla., where only 30 percent of agents sold even a single home last year, real estate agents are "dropping out" daily, says local realtor Ginette Young. The Oregon Association of Realtors reports an 11.5 percent decline statewide of licensed agents in the past year.

Many of those who leave quietly shelve their signs. Others go out big: In Gilbert, Ariz., the fastest-growing city in the fastest-growing state, RE/MAX 2000 closed 13 offices throughout the Valley of the Sun, laying off at least 20 employees and scores of contract agents right before Christmas. The company couldn't meet its expenses.

Real estate is a line of work filled with mothers returning to the workforce, older workers squeezed out of lifetime careers, and young opportunists looking to trade sweat equity for potentially big cash-outs. Indeed, the industry norm is that only 4 percent of agents choose real estate sales as a first career.

In Georgia, realty ranks had swelled to 48,000 at the peak of the market. In the end, many say, there were too many inexperienced agents hawking houses.

"There's a lot of money being spent [on real estate classes] teaching agents how to waste a year of their life," says Atlanta agent Sandy Koza. "Then you get a downturn and a bunch of people get bumped. To [experienced agents like] us, it cleans out the business a little bit."

Florida's Cape Coral, a canal-sliced beach community, saw 800 building permits a month fall to 25 to 30 in the past year. The rapid slowdown left real estate agents, investors, and brokers holding the bag on big-money deals.

"It's a gold-rush mentality," says Michael Davis, an economist at Southern Methodist University's Cox School of Business in Dallas. He has been struck by how many agents, brokers, and investors, acting against conventional wisdom of portfolio management, converted large percentages of cash holdings into only a single and somewhat risky investment: property. "I don't know whether they're ignorant or optimistic, perhaps a little of both," says Dr. Davis.

Many others became the foot soldiers in the housing boom, second- or third-careerists drawn to the self-determination, relatively low entrance costs, and perhaps even the allure of the trade as embodied by novelist Richard Ford's legendary character Frank Bascombe, an angst-driven realtor who wanders the Jersey Shore for deals and revelations.

A former computer developer, Thomas Banecke of Sandy Springs, Ga., spent most of the summer baby-sitting a new condo development – usually a plum assignment. But when the Atlanta condo market tanked, foot traffic dwindled to almost zero.

Mr. Banecke is now back in the computer business and is putting his real estate career on hold. In some ways, he says, the cold housing market forced real estate agents, especially rookies, to confront their own abilities, schemes, and dreams. Upfront costs, marketing, association fees, and the crucial contacts are either more costly or harder to procure than an aspiring real estate agent usually expects, Banecke says.

"This kind of thing will wipe up a whole bunch of people who thought they could do this to make a living," he says.

As for McMahon, the Atlanta agent, she still had a nice listing book and plenty of leads when she called it quits. In the end, unreliable buyers, surly sellers, and a lack of office camaraderie contributed to a decision that solidified when home sales and prices dipped. "I was waiting for a time to kind of swing out," she says. She's planning to become a high school science teacher.

One problem for out-of-work agents is that their skills may not transfer easily to other careers. California is waiting to hear on a $9 million federal retraining grant after 6,000 people lost their jobs in the housing industry since September.

But Dr. Baen of the University of North Texas is optimistic about their futures. "These people are hustlers, hard workers. They're used to getting on the phone," he says. "They'll end up in insurance, in mutual funds, in retirement planning, and commodities."

(http://real-us.news.yahoo.com)

8.1.08

Dissatisfaction with Economy Jumps: NBC/WSJ Poll

(old news ftr) By Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director | 20 Dec 2007 | 03:02 PM ET

The number of American very dissatisfied with current economic conditions rose sharply according to the latest poll conducted by NBC and the Wall Street Journal.

There is definitely a perception that the economy is in trouble. Interestingly, 85 percent of Democrats view the economy in dark terms, as well as 40% of GOPers.

According to our pollsters, 40 percent of folks are "very" dissatisfied with the economy. That's a 15 point jump on intensity, which is a sign this is becoming a greater concern, frankly, than any other issue.

Fifty-six percent of those surveyed said they expected a recession over the next 12 months, compare with 31 percent not predicting a downturn and 13 percent unsure.

This is the big takeaway from this poll: 2008 could end up being "the economy, stupid" and not "Iraq/Iran or Terrorism, stupid."

This, perhaps, is now a bigger problem for the GOP than Iraq was in 2006. If the GOP thought 2006 was tough dealing with Iraq, wait until they have to deal with an economy election. See 1992 as prime example.

Finally, do realize that when folks say "health care" is a concern, they aren't complaining about the care they get. But they are worried about access to it. They are worried about losing their job and their health care. Bottom line: assume health care is an economic concern more so than a medical concern.

The poll surveyed 1,008 adults between Dec. 14 and Dec. 17 and the margin of error is 3.1%.

(http://www.cnbc.com)


7.1.08

China's toy exports rebound

6 Jan 2008, 1325 hrs IST,PTI

BEIJING: Exports of Chinese toys soared in the first 10 months of 2007 touching USD 7.07 billion, registering a robust 20.1 per cent growth over the same period the previous year.


The 10-month period saw China's toy exports to European and North American markets recover and to emerging markets grow rapidly, Customs sources said.

Between January and October, China sold toys worth USD 3.06 billion to the US, a 13.3 per cent rise over the same period in 2006, and USD 1.72 billion worth to the European Union (EU), up 29.9 per cent.

The growth rate was 11.2 percentage higher for the US and 24.9 percentage points for the EU. The two markets absorbed 67.6 per cent of China's total toy exports, the official Xinhua news agency said quoting sources.

China also sold toys of USD 390 million worth to Latin America, up 42.2 per cent.

"Made in China" image faced an unprecedented "confidence crisis," triggered by the recall of China-made toys by Mattel Inc of the United States, which was followed by others.

Millions of toys were recalled last year, particularly by the US raising concerns over safety. The latest in the scandal was the pulling off the shelves of 4.2 million bead toys whose exports China froze after the US authorities and Australia raised objections over it's quality.

Chinese authorities had launched a crackdown to improve the safety record with exports rebounding.

It was not just quality defects that prompted recalls but disputes over standards, technical barriers, price hikes, trade protectionism and playing-up of media coverage were also involved, Xinhua reported.

(http://timesofindia.com)



CITGO, Venezuela Distribute Oil To U.S. Services

CITGO, Venezuela Distribute Oil To U.S. Services
Joe Kennedy Program Delivers To Hordes Of NYC Qualified Residents Jan 7, 2008 4:46 pm US/Eastern

Provides 112 Million Gallons Of Fuel To Social Services In 23 States

NEW YORK (CBS) ― For scores of low-income families it will be like the equivalent of winning a small lottery jackpot. A program run by former Congressman Joe Kennedy will deliver free heating oil – donated by Citgo and the Chavez regime in Venezuela – to some 200,000 households. CBS 2 takes a look at how the program works, and who qualifies.

"I live within my means"…For Rebecca Santiago, the means are modest. And it's not easy to pay for oil heat at her home in the Bronx. Of course it's a struggle, so when she saw the offer for 100 free gallons of oil from former congressman Joe Kennedy, she became quite curious.

"Free Oil!"

Santiago is a long time fan of the Kennedy family. She treasures a note Jackie Kennedy sent her in 1964. Despite her love for the Kennedy's, she was still skeptical upon hearing the former congressman's offer.

"Sometimes you see things, and when you call, it's something different," Santiago said.

Getting through to 1-877-JOE-4-OIL is tough – operators are swamped.

"Please call back later," is the common response. Apparently, there's good reason.


According to CITGO, The CITGO-Venezuela Heating Oil Program will provide an estimated 112 million gallons of fuel this winter to be distributed in more than 224,000 households and 250 social service providers in 23 states. These totals include the CITGO-Venezuela Tribal Heating Oil Program.


Once CBS 2 was able to get through, operators said they would send an application, asking basic information about household size and annual income.
Kennedy's office disclosed the income limit as 60 percent of the state median. So a New York family of four, for example, must make less than $43,302 to qualify. The only income verification is your signature, certifying you are telling the truth. Santiago applied on Dec. 4, 2007, and a week later received a voucher to pay her oil company when it delivered 100 gallons on Dec. 14. Santiago says it's almost $400 she won't have to spend, warming her home. For many, that's a warm thought.

Kennedy's office says every qualifying household that applies will be approved until all the available oil is allocated. That is projected to occur before the application period ends on Feb. 29, so the time to apply is now.

(http://wcbstv.com)

6.1.08

Danger ahead: The prospect of recession again confronts America

By Krishna Guha

Published: January 2 2008 20:03 | Last updated: January 2 2008 20:03

Steep decline

America has entered 2008 in greater danger of recession than at any stage since the collapse of the internet bubble in 2000-01, as the world’s largest economy struggles to maintain growth in the face of the credit squeeze, a housing slide and high oil prices.

Fourth-quarter growth for 2007 looks likely to come in at 1 per cent or less on an annual basis, while the current three months are unlikely to be much better and could even be worse. The only question is whether the economy will struggle through this sickly period and gradually regain strength over the course of the year – or succumb to its ailments and, with growth turning negative, fall into recession.

According to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, more than two-thirds of Americans believe the US is either in recession now or will be in 2008. Some of the country’s most famous economists – including Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, as well as Lawrence Summers, former Treasury secretary, and Martin Feldstein, president of the National Bureau of Economic Research – put the odds of recession at close to 50-50.

Bill Gross, chief executive of Pimco, the world’s largest bond fund manager, goes as far as to say he – like many ordinary Americans – thinks a recession has already started, in December.

Ominously, the credit markets have started to price for recession, with risk spreads rising on securities that have no direct connection with the troubled housing or financial sectors. Yet the Fed and most economists still say the single most likely outcome is that the US will make it through a rough patch and regain strength by the second half of 2008. In addition, while credit markets appear to be pricing in an increasingly high likelihood of recession, equity markets and the oil market – while off their highs – are not.

Wall Street is divided: Morgan Stanley is forecasting a recession, joining Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs, which are long-time bears, but JPMorgan and Lehman Brothers are noticeably less gloomy. Business leaders are split, too, with finance and housing executives much more pessimistic than their counterparts in other sectors. “If you talk to people in financial markets, they see recession as a virtual certainty,” says Martin Regalia, chief economist at the US Chamber, a business organisation. “If you talk to people in economic markets, they see positives in the economy that tend to offset the negatives, so you get slow growth rather than no growth.”

Who turns out to be right will depend on a titanic tug-of-war between the forces dragging down US growth and the continued strength and resilience of key sectors of the economy. The result will be of great importance to a world that – for all the dazzling growth of China and other emerging economies – would struggle to absorb a full-blown US recession.

At the heart of the problems is the bursting of the housing bubble that helped to power American growth since this economic cycle started six years ago. The end of the bubble has brought a brutal slide in home construction, house price falls that threaten to undermine household wealth and consumer spending, and turmoil in the credit markets that are used to finance housing.

The US has endured financial crises before with little or no effect on the real economy – for example, in 1987 and 1998. But these were autonomous financial crises with little connection to the underlying US economy. This financial crisis is different. It is defined by the bursting of twin bubbles in housing and the credit markets – bubbles that were deeply interconnected.

Easy money and the collapse of discipline in the credit markets helped push house prices to unsustainable levels. But when the residential property bubble finally burst it took the credit market bubble with it – decimating the value of hundreds of billions of dollars of securities linked to subprime loans that were safe only as long as house prices kept going up.

Now the credit crisis poses a direct threat of its own to the US economy. The secondary market for mortgage securities is dysfunctional, throttling the supply of many types of home finance and thereby putting further downward pressure on the housing market. Meanwhile, banks are being forced to take tens of billions of dollars in housing-related assets, once held in off-balance sheet vehicles, on to their books, while incurring massive writedowns on these and other securities. Mr Greenspan says losses on subprime and related securities are likely to reach $200bn (£101bn, €136bn) to $400bn, though the final extent will not be known until house prices stabilise.

Charts

For all the supposed benefit of securitised markets in distributing risk around the world, it appears that a large share of the ultimate risk remained with big US commercial and investment banks. So analysts fear that balance sheet strains will force these banks to pull back on lending both to consumers and to businesses outside the housing sector, creating a generalised credit crunch. “This is clearly happening,” says Mr Feldstein. “Banks are shepherding their capital. As they take these investment vehicles on board and realise they have got outstanding obligations where they provided lines of credit, they are going to be more cautious about extending credit in general.”

One sector that looks particularly vulnerable to any pullback in credit is commercial property, which has boomed over the past year, helping offset the decline in residential investment and keep building workers in employment. Housing construction continues to plunge, while the rate of decline in house prices seems to be accelerating, with some experts forecasting falls of 20 per cent or more in real terms over a number of years.

As late as the third quarter – when household wealth hit a record $58,000bn – house price declines were offset by gains on equities and other business assets. But in a tough macroeconomic environment it seems unrealistic to rely on equity gains to offset falling house prices from now on.

Most economists think consumers will respond to falling house prices by spending less and saving more. The question is, by how much? The Fed estimates that consumer spending rises or falls by $3.75 for every $100 increase or decrease in housing wealth. But some studies suggest the effect could be much larger. Moreover, if 2007 does not turn out to have broken the record, this is likely to be the first year since the second world war to see an outright annual decline in house prices. No one knows what sort of response actual house price falls would produce from homeowners.

“It is not all subprime,” says Jeff Frankel, a professor at Harvard. “Even without that, the magnitude of the fall in house prices itself is a prime candidate to cause a recession – [through] what it has done to the construction industry and household finances. Then there is oil.” The high price of oil and food is putting additional strains on consumer spending, reducing disposable income and eating away at real wage gains. Richard Berner, chief economist at Morgan Stanley, says the rise in energy and food prices between June and December alone “drained about $45bn or 0.4 per cent from consumer discretionary income”.

Traditionally, economists would expect the price of oil to fall when the US economy is weak, freeing up some disposable income and acting as a natural stabiliser. But strong demand in China and India plus geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are keeping oil hot – compounding the housing and credit problems.

Given the pressure from housing, the credit squeeze and oil, the interesting question, as Mr Greenspan puts it, is why the probability of recession is not much higher than 50 per cent. One reason is that the US had made some headway in dealing with the excesses in housing before the credit crisis erupted this summer. Home starts have already fallen from an annualised monthly rate of 2.3m units in January 2006 to 1.2m in November 2007. The construction sector has subtracted from growth for roughly a year.

Home starts may have to fall a good deal further. But the fact that the US economy has already absorbed a halving in home construction greatly improves the chances of avoiding recession. If it had to begin now, recession would be all but guaranteed.

Moreover, as Mr Greenspan pointed out in recent interviews and speeches, the business sector is quite insulated from the effect of the credit squeeze. Corporate balance sheets are unusually strong, companies have plenty of internally generated cash – as witnessed, for example, in share buybacks – and took advantage of low borrowing costs prior to the latest financial turmoil to lock in cheap long-term funds.

Indeed, there is still only limited evidence of the credit squeeze extending to non-housing-related sectors. Mr Regalia at the US Chamber says: “Banks across the board are tightening credit standards, but it does not imply a broad-based credit crunch for people and businesses with good credit histories and strong balance sheets.” He says surveys of small businesses show that funds are still available at decent rates.

This view is reflected inside the Fed where – contrary to Wall Street myth – the so-called “academics” on the board of governors have been willing to consider pre-emptive rate cuts based on forecasts of future spillovers from the credit crisis. But many regional Fed presidents – with strong ties to local business leaders – have been reluctant to ease too aggressively, pending more evidence of such spillovers outside housing.

The longer credit markets stay dysfunctional, the greater the likelihood these spillovers will eventually materialise. Put another way, either the credit markets will ultimately drag down the non-housing economy or the non-housing economy will ultimately drag the credit markets upward.

Indeed, the economy may be able to hang on long enough to win out. The export sector is booming, helped by the decline in the dollar over the past couple of years coupled with a slowing in US growth relative to that of other big economies. Looking ahead, the contribution from net exports to growth in gross domestic product will probably decline as growth eases abroad. But exports should still contribute something between a quarter-point and a half-point to growth in the coming quarters. This will provide a buttress at a time when domestic demand is very weak.

Strong overseas earnings, flattered in conversion by the weak dollar, are also propping up the stock market, guarding against a second blow to household wealth. Business investment is muted and the latest durable goods report raises concerns that companies may be pulling in their horns. But there is little sign that investment is falling off a cliff.

Ultimately, however, the fate of the US economy lies with the consumer. “The consumer so far is hanging in there but is not in great shape,” says Mr Feldstein.

Consumer confidence is weak: the latest University of Michigan survey puts sentiment only a fraction above its post-Hurricane Katrina low. Yet, for all the gloom in surveys, actual consumer spending remains quite resilient. November’s retail sales figures were much stronger than expected; the early data on December look a good deal weaker but still not disastrous.

Underpinning this is continued strong growth in nominal income in a still tight labour market, with unemployment at 4.7 per cent. If unemployment started to rise sharply and income growth slowed, the outlook for consumer spending would deteriorate sharply. But while the pace of job creation has slowed, there are few signs of a rapid deterioration in the labour market.

Moreover, there are reasons why companies may be reluctant to shed workers. Since the last recession ended in November 2001, businesses have been unusually cautious about adding employees – leaving them still quite lean in staffing terms. Slowing productivity growth also means that for any given increase in output, companies will need more workers – unlike in the early part of this decade when rapid productivity growth meant they could expand without adding more staff.

Fed analysis suggests that, given appropriate monetary policy, the economy can absorb falling house prices and keep growing – particularly if the decline is not too abrupt. All analysts agree that policy actions by the Fed – and the US government, in what is a presidential election year – could make the difference between recession and recovery.

Peter Hooper, chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities, says the Fed’s latest move to auction loans into the money market and the administration-sponsored plan to freeze the interest rates on some subprime loans, reducing the expected number of foreclosures, made him cut his estimate of recession risk from 50 per cent to 40 per cent.

Almost all analysts’ forecasts for moderate growth, in the 2 per cent range for 2008 as a whole, assume at least one more Fed interest rate cut – some assume three or more downward shifts. However, if upward pressure on inflation increases – possibly from high oil prices or a weak dollar – the Fed may not be able to cut as much as the market expects, increasing the probability of recession.

Less conventional sources of support could prove decisive. The Federal  Home Loan Banks are funnelling loans into the banking system at an annualised rate of $746bn, according to Fed data for the third quarter. These loans – against housing-related securities – are allowing banks to continue offering mortgages, preventing a sudden stop in housing finance and, so far at least, the failure of any big lenders.

Meanwhile, sovereign wealth funds are pouring billions of dollars into the US financial system in return for equity, recapitalising banks and easing their balance sheet strains. If this happens on a large enough scale, it could ward off a generalised credit crunch.

Yet even in the most optimistic of plausible scenarios, the US will skirt along the brink of recession for a number of months with very weak growth. During this period, it could easily tip over the edge.

Some, including David Rosenberg, chief economist at Merrill Lynch, see it as difficult for the economy to grow at only about 1 per cent for any sustained period without stalling and falling into recession. Others including Ben Bernanke, Fed chairman, say economies do not stall merely for lack of sufficient forward momentum. But all agree that while the US works through a period of very low growth it will be particularly exposed to any additional shocks or an intensification of the existing problems in housing and the financial sector.

“The story of recessions is that unexpected adverse shocks – or a coincidence of adverse shocks – hit a vulnerable economy,” says Larry Meyer, chairman of Macro­economic Advisers and a former Fed governor. “This economy is vulnerable.”

When is it on and when is it over? The arcane art of cycle dating

The common definition of a recession is two successive quarters of negative economic growth. However, the formal definition is more complex.

The Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research in the US is charged with deciding when recessions begin and end. The committee is made up of top economists operating independently of the government and is chaired by Robert Hall, a professor at Stanford.

It regards growth in gross domestic product in real terms (adjusting for inflation) as the ”single best measure” of economic activity. But it does not rely exclusively on GDP statistics, for a number of reasons. The Bureau of Economic Analysis publishes GDP estimates only quarterly, while the committee works on a monthly basis. Moreover, the GDP estimates are extensively revised over a number of years.

So the Business Cycle Dating Committee uses other metrics as well. It puts “particular emphasis” on personal income (in real terms less transfer payments) and employment. In addition it looks at industrial production and wholesale and retail sales. It also weighs estimates of monthly GDP growth by private sector forecasters.

The last recession, according to the committee, began in March 2001 and ended in November of that year.

If the US falls into a sharp or prolonged recession this time, the judgment will be easy. However, if output growth stalls but jobs and incomes continue to grow, the committee could face a tough decision as to whether to term the slowdown of late 2007/early 2008 a recession or not.

Do not expect an answer soon. The committee normally declares the start of a recession six to 18 months after the event. Since recessions typically last less than a year, this means a recession can be over before it has officially begun.

Blog Archive

Search This Blog