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Greenspan predicts US "recovery" but sounds some
warnings
By Nick Beams
28 February 2002
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While US Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspans
semi-annual testimony to Congress on Wednesday was broadly in
line with market expectationsforecasting a mild
recovery for the US economythere were some notes of caution,
and even words of warning.
Greenspan began by saying that the typical dynamics of
the business cycle had re-emerged and were prompting a firming
in economic activity. However, he was quick to add that
an array of influences unique to this business cycle
seemed likely to moderate the speed of the anticipated recovery.
The typical dynamics relate to the rundown in inventory.
As firms liquidate their stocks in the first phase of a recession,
there eventually comes a point when inventories are so low that
they must issue new orders. This stimulates an increase in industrial
production, leading in turn to a rise in household income and
spending.
But after pointing to this process, Greenspan cautioned that
the impetus to the growth of activity would be short-lived
unless sustained increases in final demand kick in before the
positive effects from inventory liquidation dissipate.
The central question is where is the increase in final demand
going to come from? Here some of the problems confronting the
American economy start to emerge.
As Greenspan noted, most recoveries in the postwar period have
received a boost from a rebound in consumer durables and
housing from recession-depressed levels in addition to an abatement
of inventory liquidation. But on this occasion, spending
on both housing and consumer durables has remained relatively
high during the downturn of the past 12 months and has proved
to be a major stabilising force.
This means that the potential for a significant acceleration
in activity in this sector is likely to be more limited than in
past cycles. In fact, given that unemployment was likely
to continue to rise, even if the economy were on the road to recovery
a soft labour market could put something of a damper on
consumer spending. According to Federal Reserve estimates
the unemployment rate is anticipated to rise somewhat further
over 2002 to the region of 6-6.25 percent.
The key question for the state of the economy is what will
happen to investment spending? This is because the current downturnunlike
others in the postwar periodwas not induced by a fall in
consumption spending which then flowed on to investment. Rather,
it began because of a sharp fall in business investment that has
continued even as consumption spending has remained relatively
high.
In Greenspans words, the broad contours of the
present cycle have been, and will continue to be, driven by the
evolution of corporate profits and capital investment.
The retrenchment in capital spending over the past year
and a half was central to the sharp slowing we experienced in
overall activity. The steep rise in high-tech spending that occurred
in the early post Y-2K months was clearly not sustainable. The
demand for many of the newer technologies was growing rapidly,
but capacity was expanding even faster and that imbalance exerted
significant downward pressure on the prices and profits of producers
of high-tech goods and services.
As a result, for much of last year the resulting decline
in investment outlays was fierce and unrelenting and even
though the weakness was most pronounced in the technology area,
reductions in capitalist outlays were broad-based.
These cutbacks interacted with falling profits and equity prices
with the resultant problems compounded by the fact that due to
increased global competition there was a virtual absence
of pricing power across much of American business. In other
words, in a generally low inflation environment, firms were unable
to maintain profits by passing on cost increases to consumers.
While there was some evidence that a recovery in some forms
of high-tech investment had begunGreenspan noted the upturn
in the production of semiconductors last autumnthe contraction
of investment in the communications sector, where the amount of
overcapacity was substantial, as yet shows few signs of abating,
and business investment in some other sectors, such as aircraft,
hit by the drop in air travel, will presumably remain weak this
year.
As in many previous speeches, Greenspan pointed to the positive
effects of information technology. Improved access to real-time
information and the deregulation of finance and product markets,
leading to the spreading of risks, meant that imbalances would
more likely be contained. Consequently cyclical episodes
should be less severe than would be the case otherwise.
This implied reduction in volatility, other things
being equal, should bring lower risk.
However, he went on to warn that other things ... may
not be wholly equal. There was a danger that the very
technologies that appear to be the main cause of our apparent
increased flexibility and resiliency may also be imparting different
forms of vulnerability that could intensify or be intensified
by the business cycle.
The Enron collapse
The new dangers of instability arise from the implications
of the Enron collapse where a firm valued at hundreds of billions
of dollars and ranked in the top ten of US corporations has disappeared
virtually overnight.
As the recent events surrounding Enron have highlighted,
a firm is inherently fragile if its value added emanates more
from conceptual as distinct from physical assets. A physical asset,
whether an office building or an automotive assembly plant, has
the capability of producing goods even if the reputation of the
managers of such facilities falls under a cloud. The rapidity
of Enrons decline is an effective illustration of the vulnerability
of a firm whose market value largely rests on capitalised reputation.
The physical assets of such a firm comprise a small portion of
its asset base. Trust and reputation can vanish overnight. A factory
cannot.
While Greenspan maintained a measured tonethe Fed chairman
is all too well aware of the impact of his comments on jittery
financial marketsthe implications of his remarks are all
too clear: significant dangers to the US and world economy arise
from the fact that much accumulated corporate wealth is little
more than a financial house of cards.
Even while carefully choosing his words, Greenspan did point
to the potential flow-on effects of Enron-type collapses noting
that macroeconomic risks can emerge if the problems
at one particular firm tend to make investors uncertain about
other firms they see as similarly situated.
The difficulty of valuing such firms that deal primarily
with concepts and the growing size and importance of these firms,
he continued, may make our economy more susceptible to this
type of contagion.
Even though it has forecast a recovery for 2002,
the Feds growth estimates make clear that it will be very
limited. The increase of real gross domestic product for the year
is expected to be between 2.5 percent and 3 percent. In the view
of some economists, any growth rate below 3 percent cannot be
properly classed as a recovery because unemployment
continues to rise, while profits and capacity utilisation continue
to fall.
Even Greenspan, who generally tries to put the best gloss on
the economic outlook, conceded that the Feds forecasts were
somewhat below the rates of growth typically seen early
in previous expansions.
Certain factors, such as the lack of pent-up demand in
the consumer sector, significant levels of excess capacity in
a number of industries, weakness and financial fragility in some
key international trading partners, and persistent caution in
financial markets at home, seem likely to restrain the near-term
performance of the economy, he said.
In other words, the present apparent upturn could be the prelude
to another declinethe so-called W or double-dip
recession forecast by some observersor the start of a long
period of sub-normal economic growth.
See Also:
Enron fallout is spreading
[21 February 2002]
US layoffs continue to mount in new year
[14 February 2002]
Claims of US "recovery" look
premature
[7 February 2002]
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