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US economic recovery may be slowest since 1945

September - 14 - 2009

economic_recovery2The US recovery may be the slowest since World War II to regain all the ground lost during the recession, even if economists’ more optimistic forecasts for expansion turn out to be right.

The slump this time was so deep, said JPMorgan Chase & Co. chief economist Bruce Kasman, that the 3.5-percent average quarterly growth rate he sees in the next year won’t be enough to bring gross domestic product (GDP) back to its $13.42-trillion pre-crisis peak. That’s in contrast with the last 10 recoveries, when GDP returned to its previous levels within 12 months.

The result: A year after the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. helped drive GDP down to an annualized $12.89 trillion in the second quarter, there’s still “plenty of malaise,” Kasman said. Unemployment may remain close to the current 26-year high of 9.7 percent through 2010, upsetting voters ahead of mid-term Congressional elections and forcing officials to keep interest rates near zero and the budget deficit around this year’s record $1.6 trillion.

“This will be the most disappointing recovery,” said Kasman, whose forecast compares with the median estimate of 2.5 percent growth in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

The United States might not recover the 6.9 million jobs and the $13.9 trillion in wealth lost during the recession until about the middle of the decade, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. The rate may never get back down to the 4.4 percent low of 2007, he said.

Stock prices may take three or four years to reach their previous highs as the cyclical revival of the economy gradually boosts corporate profits, said Allen Sinai, chief economist at consulting group Decision Economics in New York.

“It will be a bull market, but not a roaring bull market,” Sinai said. He sees the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index rising to 1,100 by the end of 2009 from its close of 1,042.73 on September 11. The index hit a record 1,565.15 on October 9, 2007, and then fell to a 12-year low of 676.53 on March 9, 2009.

Companies, particularly retailers such as Macy’s Inc., may have to adjust as consumers buy less. Household spending as a share of GDP might fall to its long-run historical average of 65 percent from 70 percent in the past decade as people opt to save more, according to economists Peter Berezin and Alex Kelston of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The restrained performance that is forecast for the economy reflects both the depth and the origins of the recession, which began in December 2007. The 3.9-percent decline in gross domestic product was the most since World War II.

While Nippon Yusen K.K., Japan’s largest shipping line, has been able to raise rates on container services to the United States, it continues to lose money on the business. Mikitoshi Kai, head of investor relations for the Tokyo-based company, said in an interview that “we need to increase rates by a lot more to make a profit.”

The decline has been a “balance-sheet recession,” says Richard Koo, chief economist at Tokyo-based Nomura Research Institute. Those take time to recover from, as once highly leveraged banks and consumers gradually reduce their debt, he said.

Policy makers may have to keep interest rates low and the federal budget deficit high to push the economy forward as financial institutions and households adjust. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his fellow central-bank colleagues might hold their target for the federal funds rate between zero and 0.25 percent through 2010, said Kasman at JPMorgan in New York, the second-largest US bank. That’s the rate at which commercial banks lend each other money overnight.

“The Fed may need to maintain fairly low interest rates over a period of many years,” Berezin and Kelston, of New York- based Goldman, the fifth-biggest US bank, wrote in a September 9 report.

On the fiscal front, the deficit will total $1.29 trillion in the year starting October 1, boosted by a $787 billion stimulus package and aid to banks, according to Maury Harris, chief economist in New York at UBS Securities, a unit of Zurich-based investment bank UBS AG.

“I suspect the deficit will continue to balloon for years,” said Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
By businessmirror.com.ph

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