Footsteps of a recession grow louder
Economists can't officially call it a 'recession' until six months after it began, but this one's arrival seems noisier.
Recessions usually arrive in the United States as quietly as a toddler's footsteps – barely heard. They "sneak up on us," says Victor Zarnowitz of the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass.
Dr. Zarnowitz is one of the economists on the NBER's "dating committee," which has the task of naming the months when a recession started and the subsequent recovery began.
Today's recession, if it's not just a major slowdown, has arrived with the accompaniment of financial trumpets blaring dissonant notes. There's the housing bust, the subprime mortgage mess, the devalued collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) with their mysterious mix of mortgages, the plunge in the US dollar, oil at $100 a barrel, rising unemployment, and unsettled consumers.
The economic news is "noisy," says Zarnowitz, who also keeps track of the economic indicators put out by the Conference Board in New York.
That business research group has not yet forecast a recession, but Zarnowitz says it can't be ruled out. A growing number of economists say the nation is already in recession. As long ago as November 2006, Washington think-tank economist Dean Baker wrote a 19-page study predicting a bust in the housing bubble would bring recession in 2007.
The Federal Reserve, with its large cut in interest rates last week, is acting as if a recession is imminent. President Bush and Congress are proposing quick tax rebates and other measures, trying to keep the economy moving ahead.
The NBER usually declares a recession after a six-month decline of important economic statistics such as gross domestic product (GDP), industrial production, employment, retail sales, manufacturing sales, and wholesale sales. But economists in general have a poor record of forecasting recessions. That's partly because the economic data arrives late and is often revised even later. "I don't know good examples of predicted recessions," says Zarnowitz.
But there are exceptions. Economist Lacy Hunt and his boss, Van Hoisington, wrote in a review last April for Hoisington Investment Management Co., in Austin, Texas, that "faltering consumer spending and a continuing housing recession will lead to recessionary conditions in the quarters ahead."
Last October Jack Lavery, a consulting economist in Spring Lake, N.J., also predicted a recession starting in the last quarter of 2007. Last week, he noted: "Republicans and Democrats are falling over one another to be perceived as the architect of saving the economy."
Neither economist expects a quick end to the assumed recession. Mr. Lavery says the slump will last two or three quarters of 2008, with the Fed "coming to the rescue" by pushing the Federal Funds interest rate (on loans between banks) down to 2 percent by the end of this year and to 1.25 percent by spring 2009. Lavery also doesn't see a turnaround in the housing market until late this year, with house prices down 15 to 20 percent from their peak.
Mr. Hunt, who helps manage $3.5 billion in bonds for large institutions, has little faith that either Fed action or fiscal stimulus will "provide much relief" to the economy soon. He assumes it will take time for financial institutions to rebuild capital after their big losses of recent months.
Such skepticism about fiscal rescue packages, of course, won't stop Washington from leaping into the fray. Hunt cites surveys by economists Joel Slemrod and Matthew Schapiro of the University of Michigan indicating that recipients of the 2001 tax rebates, meant to counter the recession then under way, would spend only about one-third of the $600 rebated to couples and $300 to singles. This was true of lower-income people as well as those with higher incomes, they found. Such spending, the theory holds, would boost business sales and thus the economy. The extra $38 billion in federal debt created by the rebate would not need to be repaid until years later when, it is assumed, the economy will be in better shape. The 2001 rebates weren't ineffective, says Professor Slemrod, but also "not as effective as one might hope. We can't expect miracles."
Congress and the White House agreed last Thursday on a bigger fiscal package of $145 billion, about 1 percent of GDP (the total output of goods and services in the nation). Such action is more civil than what happened in 1934 during the Great Depression when the social safety net was weak. Farmers in Le Mans, Iowa, threatened a judge who had approved farm foreclosures with lynching. Instead, they beat him badly and left him in a ditch. At foreclosure auctions, neighbors sometimes arrived carrying shotguns. It took courage to make a bid.
Frank Genovese, a retired economist at Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., suggests a modern, more civil equivalent: Raise government fees on banks foreclosing homes to a level that will encourage them to reach a more favorable mortgage deal with endangered homeowners.
Expect to hear more about recession rescue tactics in the months ahead.