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US growth rate climbs, but economic problems remain
By Nick Beams
31 October 2003
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Nearly two years after the official end of the recession, the
US economy has recorded its fastest growth rate in almost two
decades. Figures released by the Commerce Department on Thursday
showed that in the third quarter, gross domestic product (GDP)
expanded at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 7.2 percent;
well above the 6 percent forecast by economists and more than
double the rate of 3.3 percent in the second quarter.
While the GDP expansion was the most rapid since the third
quarter of 1984, when the US economy grew at a rate of 9 percent,
a number of aspects of the present recovery indicate that the
operation of the business cycle is far from normal.
Consumer spending, financed by low interest rates and increasing
debt, was a major component of the increased growth. Overall consumption
spending, which accounts for two thirds of the GDP, was up by
6.6 percent compared to 3.8 percent in the second quarter. This
was the fastest increase in consumption spending since the first
quarter of 1988, much of it due to a surge in purchases of consumer
durables, including cars, which rose by 26.9 percent following
a 24.3 percent increase in the second quarter.
Business spending also lifted, up 11.1 percent, following an
increase of 7.3 percent in the second quarterthe largest
increase in this item since the first quarter of 2000.
On the surface these figures point to the start of a self-sustaining
recovery, with both business and consumption spending on the rise.
Closer examination of the state of the US economy, however, reveals
that this is far from the case.
In the first place, the increase in consumption spending was
not the result of a rise in aggregate income, flowing from increased
employment, as would be the case in a normal recovery.
According to the Economic Policy Institute, the strength
of consumer spending rested on tax cuts and mortgage refinancing
with a one time tax cut boosting disposable income by $100 billion.
This meant that after-tax income grew by 7.2 percent. Before-tax
income, however, rose by only 1 percent, while real wage and salary
income, after taking inflation into account, actually fell by
0.1 percent in the quarter.
The income figures point to the main peculiarity of the present
recoverythe continued decline in employment.
In a comment published on October 24, Morgan Stanley chief economist
Stephen Roach noted that by our calculations, over the first
21 months of this recovery, real wage and salary disbursementsthe
dominant component of personal incomeare running about $320
billion below the path that would have been generated in a normal
recovery.
According to his figures, some 22 months after the recession
supposedly ended in November 2001, private sector hiring in the
US economy was running 4.3 million workers below the norm of the
past six recoveries.
Other figures highlight this process. In a recent comment,
New York Times op-ed columnist, Bob Herbert, pointed out
that in the past two years the number of Americans living in poverty
has increased by three million, while the median household income
has fallen for the past two years. According to research by EPI
senior economist Jared Bernstein the decline in the number of
hours worked by families, rather than by individuals, was of
a magnitude thats historically been commensurate with double
digit unemployment rates. Not only are fewer family members
working, the ones who are employed are working less hours.
Another peculiarity of the present recovery is the behaviour
of the US Federal Reserve. On Tuesday, the Fed decided to keep
its short-term interest rate at its 45-year low of 1 percent and
indicated that its easy money policy would be maintained for
a considerable period.
This seems to indicate that the Fed fears that if it starts
to raise interest rates, even by a relatively small amount, debt-financed
consumption spending, which has largely sustained the US economy
over the past two years, could be adversely affected.
In its statement on interest rate policy, the Fed noted that
business pricing power and increases in core consumer prices
remain muted and that the risk of inflation becoming
undesirably low remains the predominant concern for the foreseeable
future.
The continued lack of business pricing power has major implications
for employment. It points to the fact that increased profits will
come, not from increased sales and additional hiring to meet demand,
but from the introduction of new technologies which will cut labour
costs and reduce employment.
Considering the US economy as a whole, the latest growth figures
do nothing to lessen concerns among economists over the growing
structural imbalancesin particular, the widening balance
of payments deficit and the growing budget deficit, which both
stand at more than half a trillion dollars.
In an interview published earlier this week, former BusinessWeek
chief economist William Wolman referred to the mounting debt problems.
If you add up Americas trade deficit and its federal
budget deficit, and state and local deficits, you reach a ratio
of debt to income which puts us in a category where the World
Bank and the IMF would rate us as dangerous, if we werent
the strongest country in the world but just an average country,
he said. Dangers spring from these twin deficits that will
end up putting upward pressure on interest rates.
These dangers are not going to be overcome through increased
US growth and may well be worsened. If the US economy keeps expanding
at a faster rate than the world average, then the current account
deficit will continue to widen, making the American financial
system even more dependent on an inflow of funds, especially from
Japan and the rest of East Asia.
However, if growth rates increase in the rest of the world,
funds will be attracted elsewhere and it will be increasingly
difficult to finance the US deficits. Accordingly, in order to
attract funds, yields on Treasury bonds will have to rise, bringing
an increase in interest rates throughout the economy, leading
to slower US growth or possibly a recession if debt-financed consumption
spending falls rapidly.
This growing tendency of economic growth to resemble a zero-sum
game, or a see-saw as the noted British economic
analyst Brian Reading put it, points to the fact that the world
economy as a whole is afflicted with deep-seated structural problems,
manifested in overcapacity and over-production.
See Also:
Dollar fall adds to global
turbulence
[30 September 2003]
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