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WSWS : News
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America : US
Economy
Surprise cut in US interest rates highlights alarm over sinking
economy
By Barry Grey
5 January 2001
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The US Federal Reserve Board's surprise .5 percent cut in interest
rates January 3 sparked a heady one-day rally on Wall Street.
The technology-laden Nasdaq composite index rose a record 14.2
percent, the Dow Jones industrial average gained 2.8 percent and
the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index rose by 5 percent.
More significant, however, was what the Fed's action revealed
about the alarm within top financial circles over the plunge of
the American economy into recession. Coming in the midst of falling
share values and a raft of dire economic reports, the move by
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan had the character
of an attempt to stave off a meltdown on the stock exchange and
a financial crisis of indeterminate proportions.
Greenspan's initiative was highly unusual on two counts. It
came nearly a month before the next scheduled meeting of the Fed's
rate-setting body, and barely two weeks after the last such meeting,
when the nation's top bank officials decided against a reduction
in interest rates. Moreover, the cut of 50 basis points in the
key federal funds target ratethe interest charged for overnight
loans between bankswas a departure from Greenspan's long-standing
policy of limiting rate changes to 25 points (.25 percent) at
any one time.
Greenspan preceded the early afternoon announcement of the
emergency rate cut with a hurriedly organized conference call
with members of the Fed's rate-setting body, the Federal Open
Market Committee. The statement issued by the Federal Reserve
was clearly intended to impact that day's trading on stock and
bond markets, and avert a round of panic selling.
In its statement, the Fed also announced it had approved a
.25 percent cut in the discount rate, the interest which the Fed
charges for loans to member banks, and indicated it would cut
an additional .25 percent in that rate, a move which it carried
out on Thursday. Making clear its readiness to make further interest
rate cuts, the Fed declared its actions were taken in light
of further weakening of sales and production, and in the context
of lower consumer confidence, tight conditions in some segments
of financial markets and high energy prices sapping household
and business purchasing power.
Reacting to the Fed's actions, Alan Blinder, a Princeton University
economist who served as Greenspan's vice chairman from mid-1994
through early 1996, said, This says to me that Alan Greenspan
is considerablyand not just a little, but considerablymore
worried about the health of the economy than the consensus forecasts.
And if things are deteriorating as rapidly as Greenspan must think,
this will not be enough to stop the deterioration.
In a January 4 editorial, the Financial Times of London
offered a somber assessment of the Fed's move: The Federal
Reserve's decision to cut interest rates by half a percentage
point was almost certainly the right thing to do in Thursday's
[sic] increasingly gloomy circumstances for the US economy. Yet
it also shows how wrong even this august institution was about
the state of the economy only a few weeks ago. It may fail to
end the gathering panic about the health of the new economy.'
It may even confirm it instead...
While Wall Street reacted with wild enthusiasm on Wednesday,
Main Street may fail to react with equal alacrity. The situation
is quite unlike that of the autumn of 1998. This time, weakness
starts in Main Street and must be eliminated there...
It is even possible that the cut will make people more
nervous, since it demonstrates the degree of concern now felt
in the country's most respected institution.
In referring to the autumn of 1998, the Financial Times
was citing the last occasion when Greenspan slashed interest
rates between meetings of the Federal Open Market Committee. In
October of that year the Fed cut rates by .25 percent, one of
three rapid-fire reductions, to head off a panic over the Asian
financial crisis, Russia's default on international loans, and
the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management, a US-based hedge
fund into which major banks and investors had poured large sums.
But as the British newspaper noted, that crisis was largely
precipitated by developments outside the US, while the current
crisis is centered in a dramatic contraction in US economic activity.
Some commentators speculated on the possibility that Greenspan's
preemptive move was prompted by private knowledge of a looming
collapse of a major financial institution, akin to the Long-Term
Capital Management debacle. Recent days have seen the bankruptcy
of the Montgomery Ward retail chain and LTV, the nation's third-largest
steel producer, and there are growing signs of a credit crunch.
Evidence of distress within the banking sector emerged on Thursday,
when major US banks, including J P Morgan Chase & Co. and
Bank of America, announced they would post lower fourth-quarter
profits as a result of falling share values, the drying up of
new securities offerings and a rising toll from bad loans.
It may well turn out that the imminent failure of a major institution
played a role in Greenspan's surprise move on Wednesday. But even
in the absence of such a development, the signs of a recession,
or even a depression, are mounting rapidly, providing ample grounds
for the Fed's intervention.
Prior to Greenspan's action on Wednesday, the hemorrhaging
on the stock market that occupied the final months of 2000 was
continuing in the new year. The Nasdaq index, which had fallen
by more than 50 percent since its high point last March, plunged
another 7.2 percent on Tuesday, the first trading day of 2001.
For the whole of 2000 some $3 trillion was wiped out on the hi-tech
index, and for the stock market as a whole the loss was a massive
$2.7 trillion. Greenspan would have good reason to fear an outbreak
of panic selling, with potentially devastating consequences for
banks and other financial institutions. His sharp cut in interest
rates was aimed, in large measure, at reassuring big investors
and speculators that the Fed would act to avert an outright collapse
of the market.
But the downward trajectory of the stock market is by no means
an isolated phenomenon. It has merged with a sharp slowdown in
economic growth over the past several months, bringing in its
wake a decline in consumer spending and consumer confidence, falling
profits, a slowdown in capital investment, slumping production
in the manufacturing sector and a wave of job cuts.
US economic growth in the fourth quarter of 2000 declined to
2.2 percent, a four-year low and less than half the rate of growth
recorded last spring. On Tuesday, one day before the Fed's interest
rate cut, the National Association of Purchasing Management reported
a steep decline in manufacturing activity in December, suggesting
that the overall economy was growing at a rate of less than 1
percent a year. It was the fifth consecutive monthly decline,
the sharpest one-month drop in more than five years and the weakest
monthly reading since the end of the last recession in 1991.
The auto industry began 2001 in a tailspin, with dozens of
General Motors, Ford and Chrysler plants temporarily idled for
periods of a week or more. GM had already permanently closed down
its Oldsmobile division and announced 5,000 white-collar job cuts,
and Chrysler was expected shortly to announce a major program
of downsizing.
Vehicle sales fell sharply in December, recording an overall
decline of 7.6 percent from year ago levels. GM, Ford and Chrysler
reported declines of 17.9 percent, 14.9 percent and 14.8 percent,
respectively. On Thursday the automotive intelligence firm Autopolis
predicted that annual auto sales in the US would drop by 20 percent
by the middle of 2003.
The collapse of Montgomery Ward involves the loss of 28,000
jobs, but that is only the most dramatic instance in a growing
wave of layoffs. Sears Roebuck and Co, the country's second largest
retailer, announced Thursday it would close 89 stores and eliminate
2,400 jobs. The phenomenon of the 1999 holiday season, eToys,
announced it was laying off 700 of its 1,000 employees. The Internet
retailer's market valuation had fallen to $25 million from $11
billion in 14 months.
The outplacement firm Challenger, Gray and Christmas reported
on Thursday that US firms announced 133,713 job cuts in December,
up 203 percent from November. It was the highest number of monthly
job cut announcements recorded since the firm began making its
survey in 1993. The US Labor Department underscored the growth
of layoffs, reporting Thursday that new claims for unemployment
benefits rose for the third straight week, hitting 375,000 in
the week ending December 30.
A report on retail sales issued on Thursday gave further proof
of a rapidly decelerating economy. It documented the poor performance
of retail chains over the holiday period, estimating that December
same-store sales rose by a mere .5 percent, the smallest increase
since March of 1995.
Recessionary forces are taking their toll on corporate profits,
which slowed sharply in the fourth quarter of 2000. A host of
major companies reported lower-than-expected earnings, and AT&T
cut its dividend for the first time in its history, slashing the
payment by 83 percent. The Wall Street Journal carried
an article Thursday with the headline Decline in Corporate
Profits is Expected, quoting a series of economists who
said the Fed's action the previous day would not prevent corporate
profit trends from turning negative.
The threat of a major economic emergency is compounded by the
political trauma of the 2000 election. Greenspan and the Fed are
no doubt concerned over the prospect of the Bush administration
taking office under conditions of a full-blown financial and industrial
crisis.
See Also:
US economy on the way
to recession
[30 December 2000]
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