Saturday, July 11, 2009

Money & Business

Capital Commerce

Mental Recession? Maybe. Economic Recession? No

July 16, 2008 03:21 PM ET | James Pethokoukis | Permanent Link | Print

One the smartest guys I know is Bruce Kasman over at JPMorgan, and he still doesn't think the economy is going to fall into recession, much a less a severe, 1982-style downturn. (Neither, by the way, does the Fed.) Rather, he sees the economy muddling along with 1 percent GDP growth in the second half. Here are his three reasons:

1) Profit margins at nonfinancial companies remain healthy. "This is a testament to the fact that firms have produced strong productivity gains—estimated to have risen at a 2.5% pace in 1H08."

2) Trade remains strong. "This is related to the decline in the dollar and the composition of US exports which is concentrated in agricultural products, industrial supplies, and capital equipment—items that remain in demand by rapidly growing emerging market economies."

3) Businesses will have to rebuild their inventories. "Apparently, retailers and manufacturers are using the lift to demand from rebate spending and strong exports in 2Q08—in which final sales grew at a faster than 3% clip—to clear their shelves. In addition, the agricultural sector is experiencing a forced inventory drawdown due to floods and bad weather conditions. This destocking is holding back our estimate of 2Q08 growth to 2.2%. But it will add significantly to growth in the coming quarters. It should be noted that only twice in the last three decades—at the end of 2001 and 1982—did firms destock at the pace seen in 1H08. In both these previous cases, a stabilization in stockbuilding contributed more than 1.5 percentage points to growth over the following two quarters."

Tags: economy | recession | JPMorgan Chase

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Reader Comments

Pure day dreaming

you suckers import every thing from the rest of the world. Wage unnecessary wars, kill millions of iraqis and dream to get away with one percent growth.The punishment for all your atrocities is long over due. The only way to punish you is stay away from your t bills for now allowing hyperinflation to set in in your country and then crash the dollar a year from now. Then you may avoid recession but deep economic depression will haunt your country.

So who's hiring? We've started the second great depression.

Let's see. EVERYONE I know has been laid off.

I haven't had a job since I was laid off after 9/11

from Schwab and my programming job went to India.

If we're not in a recession how come EVERYWHERE

I go I see AVAILABLE and FOR LEASE on store fronts

that have NEVER been available before.

How come grocery stores are cutting the hours of their

employees. How come nobody's hiring.

This is just the beginning, it's going to get

much, much worse. There are NO JOBS - anywhere.

Blake

Good Data

I for one appreciate the data points you're keeping alive in the public debate, which would otherwise die on paragraph 7 of a story on page C9.... I've become more cautiously optimistic than before, and one of the challenges is finding any mention of positive data points in the headline media. Keep it up.

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About the Capital Commerce Blog

Send an E-mail to mbandyk@usnews.com.

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital. Reach him by email at mbandyk@usnews.com.

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