Rick Newman

How To Tell When The Economy’s Getting Better

By Rick Newman

Posted: February 12, 2009


The New York Stock Exchange
(Charlie Archambault for USN&WR)

President Obama has finally signed the stimulus bill. He has also promised a tough new bank-rescue plan to boost lending and limit outrageous pay. Troubled homeowners may even get some relief. All told, the government could spend more than $3 trillion to help end the recession.

So now all we have to do is sit back and watch the economy grow like a beanstalk, right?

If only. One risk of the unprecedented government intervention is that it won’t do all that much to hasten the end of the recession. Another risk is that consumers, expecting a magic-bullet fix, could fail to prepare for tough times that still lie ahead. “This is going to be a difficult year,” Obama himself said at his first press conference. “If we get things right, then starting next year we can start seeing some significant improvement.”

[Read 4 myths about Obama’s bank-rescue plan.]

Next year? Afraid so. Most economists agree that it will take that long, at least, before the biggest problems – mounting layoffs, the housing bust, the banking crisis, and plunging confidence – start to turn around. Here’s what to watch for to tell whether the stimulus package is actually working, and when the economy might start to mend.

An improvement in the unemployment rate. Of all the economic indicators, this is probably the single most important. But you might want to avert your eyes for awhile.

Obama has talked about creating 3 to 4 million new jobs, and if the stimulus plan works, it might come close to that – over several years, combined. But it’s almost certain that through this summer and into the fall, there will be a net job loss, not a gain. Most economists expect the unemployment rate, now 7.6 percent, to hit at least 9 percent by the end of this year. That represents up to 2 million more lost jobs. Many of those cuts are already in the works - just follow the recent layoff announcements from companies like Caterpillar (20,000), Boeing (10,000), SprintNextel (8,000) and Home Depot (7,000). But the pink slips haven’t all gone out yet, so the layoffs haven’t shows up in the official numbers.

[See 15 companies that might not survive 2009.]

The first sign of an improvement will be … corporate silence. As in no more draconian job-cut announcements. Once that happens (or doesn’t), the unemployment rate will plateau. Then, companies might start hiring again, and a couple of months after that, the unemployment rate will start to fall. Three straight monthly declines would be a good sign that the economy is really on the rebound. That probably won’t happen until 2010.

If you’re wondering what’s the point of the stimulus package if it won’t do much to help workers in 2009, look to 2010. And 2011. That’s where the plan will make a bigger difference. Moody’s Economy.com estimates that by the middle of 2010, the unemployment rate will start to drift back toward 8.5 percent. But without any stimulus plan, it would have hit 11 percent. Viva la government.

More stable home prices. The realestate boom and bust is what torpedoed the economy in the first place, and the economy won’t start to recover until the housing bubble fully deflates. The good news is that housing prices have already been falling for more than two years, with prices down more than 20 percent nationwide. And we might be more than halfway toward the bottom: Moody’s Economy.com predicts that housing prices should stop falling nationwide by the second half of 2009. Overall, the forecasting firm predicts a 30 percent drop in home values from the peak values of 2006.

[See why the feds rescue banks, not homeowners.]

Others think it will take longer, but whenever it happens, an end to the housing slide will mark an important turning point. Hardly anybody thinks that prices will shoot back up or there will be another buying binge. But a boomlet, maybe. Once prices stabilize, buyers will stop worrying that they could be purchasing a costly asset that’s falling in value. As they buy, other kinds of consumer activity – like shopping for furniture and kitchen upgrades – will follow. Slowly.

A consumer confidence rebound. Since consumer confidence closely tracks the job market, the dismal numbers of the last few months probably won’t improve by much until late in 2009, or 2010. Homeowners have lost more than $3 trillion worth of value in their homes over the last three years, and investors have seen their stock portfolios shredded. So even people who feel secure in their jobs are dour.

[See how Wall Street continues to doom itself.]

A turnaround in the housing or stock markets would break the gloom and help some people feel better off. So would easier lending by banks, which would help solvent consumers buy a few more cars, appliances, and other goods. But consumer confidence won’t really start to improve until workers start to feel more secure about their jobs and income. Think 2010.

A less volatile stock market. Every investor hopes that beleaguered stocks will come roaring back in 2009 and regain some of the ground lost since the peak in 2007 – when the S&P 500 stock index was nearly 50 percent higher than it is today. But a better indicator of economic health would be a steady recovery – without the manic swings that seem to come from every hint of undisclosed trouble at some big bank or rumor of new government intervention.

The stock market is harder to predict than most other parts of the economy, since it’s deeply dependent on psychology and other intangibles. The market could bounce back by mid-summer. Or it could remain stagnant for years, like it did for most of the 1970s. The experts can’t be any more sure than you or I.

[See why “Wall Street talent” is an oxymoron.]

One hopeful sign would be less market sensitivity to events in Washington. The biggest market mover these days is the federal government, since fortunes stand to be won or lost – mostly lost – depending on how deeply the government intervenes in the activities of megabanks like Citigroup and Bank of America, and how much federal spending will be available to stand in for plunging consumer spending. The markets will be back to their old selves when earnings reports, IPO announcements, and M&A deals are what send stocks up or down, and utterings from Washington amount to little more than an echo. Since the government seems to be the only institution spending money so far in 2009, it could be awhile before Wall Street returns to form.

Economic growth turns positive. By economic standards, the current downturn has already lasted longer than the typical post-World War II recession. Yet there’s still a lot more pain to endure. A recent survey of economists by the Wall Street Journal found that the majority think the economy will continue to contract for the first half of 2009, with growth turning positive in the second half of the year. That outlook is much worse than a few months ago, and even when growth turns positive the economy could sputter along without many new jobs or bold moves in the private sector.

[See why lousy unemployment numbers are no surprise.]

It’s always possible that impatient consumers will get sick of holding back, and start running up their credit card balances once again (if the banks let them). The bank-rescue plan might spur more lending than expected, goosing businesses and consumers alike. Or the stimulus plan might spread goodwill and optimism throughout the land. If you get the urge to spend, that might be the strongest indicator of all. Call the economists.

economy

I am 42 years old and from the time I was old enough to vote every president has had to recover the economy. Remember Clinton then he made all those construction jobs. What happens when the jobs are over? We just spent all this money trying to recover the economy and look what these banks are doing they just made a plan to outsource 1 billion jobs to India over the next to years to cut costs of having to repay the government back the money. I got this article of msn.com

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Leading Indian outsourcers such as Tata Consultancy , Infosys and Wipro stand to gain contracts worth about $1 billion in the next one or two years as U.S. banks emerge from the troubled asset relief program, the Economic Times reported on Monday.The newspaper said JPMorgan , Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley that received approval to buy back government stake worth $68 billion earlier this year are among the firms seeking operational efficiencies by outsourcing non-core IT and back-office projects to India.American Express , Bank of New York Mellon and Capital One, which have started repaying government debt, were also considering outsourcing, it said.

Also because of all this spending my college does not even have enough money to accept new students next year.

John Doe of FL @ Nov 23, 2009 01:49:55 AM

causes uncertain serious

atlantic place reliable seen pre biological compared space

avrillmosl of IN @ Nov 17, 2009 17:15:24 PM

Bush

Why do think the enocomy is down beacuse people stoped making and selling the 95 computers and old video games and when they was still being made and sold you see how many people was in the stores compare to how many people you see are in the stores today.So if i was those people I whould not had stoped making and selling the stuff above if that was keeping the enocomy on it's feet thru all these years.And the only way to restart the enocomy is to start making and selling the stuff above again and don't stop making and selling it again.Old videos are nintendo 64,super nintendo,sega dreamcast,sega genises 1,2 and 3 ,taria ans playstation 1.Now do you blame Bush the dad or bush the son? This is inportant to America and it's stupid to stop making and selling the stuff above and to start making new stuff like windows xp and vista and video games like playstation 3, xbox 360,nintendo wii,psp and to seee it slows down the enocomy like it did for 7 years.So hopeful Obama can fix this

Desmond Williams of OH @ Nov 15, 2009 18:46:42 PM

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Rick Newman

Rick Newman

The global economy is mysterious, even scary. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman connects the dots. In addition to his writing for U.S. News, Rick is the co-author of two books: Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11, and Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

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