Nov
US in recession, jobless to peak at 7.5 pct-survey
The U.S. economy is in recession and will contract at a faster pace in the fourth quarter, extending the decline into early 2009 as high unemployment crimps consumer spending, a survey showed.
The National Association of Business Economists’ poll of 50 professional forecasters released on Monday found that real gross domestic product was expected to fall 2.6 percent in the fourth quarter and slump 1.3 percent in the first three months of 2009.
Preliminary government estimates showed GDP contracted 0.3 percent in the third quarter. The results of the survey, which was conducted between Oct. 28 and Nov. 7 indicated growing pessimism among forecasters.
“Business economists became decidedly more negative on the economic outlook for the next several quarters as a result of the intensification of credit market stresses and evidence of spillover to the real economy,” said NABE President Chris Varvares.
“Credit conditions continue to be tenuous. Despite the hefty liquidity injections by the Fed and the Treasury, the majority of NABE panelists believe that tight credit conditions will continue.”
A month ago, forecasters expected the economy to expand 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter, with the growth pace accelerating
to 1.3 percent in the first quarter of 2009.
Troubles in the U.S. housing sector, emanating from the extension of loans to homeowners with poor credit history, have engulfed the broader economy, resulting in rising job losses and tight access to credit.
ECONOMY IN RECESSION
About 96 percent of the NABE forecasters believed that the world’s economic power house was already in recession. Half of them estimated the downturn started in the fourth quarter of 2007 or in the first quarter of 2008.
More than a third reckoned the recession began in the third quarter of 2008, and nearly three-quarters believed it could persist beyond the first quarter of 2009. Over 60 percent expected the depth of the recession to be contained, with the decline in GDP bottoming below 1.5 percent.
Overall GDP growth in 2008 was expected to come in at around 0.2 percent and top 0.7 percent next year, according to the survey. This compares with predictions of 1.2 percent and 2.2 percent respectively in October’s survey.
“With the recession continuing into 2009, GDP growth next year is expected to be a meager 0.7 percent. This would be the slowest growth over a two-year period since the early 1980s,” said Varvares, who is also the president of Macroeconomic Advisers.
Despite the gloomy economic outlook, the Federal Reserve would probably keep its benchmark overnight lending rate steady at 1 percent, raising it by 25 basis points in the last quarter of 2009, according to the survey.
The unemployment rate was likely to peak at 7.5 percent by the third quarter of 2009, according to the survey. In the October poll, the jobless rate was seen topping out at 6.4 in the second quarter of next year.
The unemployment rate rose to a 14-year peak of 6.5 percent in October. With the unemployment situation expected to deteriorate, consumer spending, which accounts for about two-thirds of economic activity, would remain depressed.
With household spending weak, auto sales forecasts were slashed to 13.4 million units this year from October’s estimate of 14.0 million. Sales for 2009 were likely to fall to 12.5 million instead of rising to 14.2 million, as had been predicted in the October survey.
On an optimistic note, analysts said the housing sales rout was likely to bottom out by mid-2009, but a lot of uncertainty remains as new home inventories run at 10-months’ supply, the survey found. Inflationary pressures would be contained as the economic downturn caps demand for oil, it showed.
The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core PCE index, was seen rising 1.8 percent over 2009, 0.2 percentage point lower than in the October survey.
Source: http://www.afxnews.com
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November 17th, 2008 at 5:00 pm
All are waiting for the coming administration to solve the nation’s problems, but
this will never happen. They will only give some signals, every individual has to
solve the problem on his own. The primary cause of the crisis is overspending at
the citizen’s level. The subprime deficit and the coming creditcard deficit are far
bigger than the deficits produced by the outgoing administration. Cheney’s
Halliburton stole 10 billion, the war was also expensive, but they are less than the
debt accumulated by every single consumer and these debts are not directly
hurting the private economy, the dumb taxpayer will be invited to pay them over
the next years. So the focus must be on the lowest level. Remedy is simple but
painful : you have to spend only the money physically present in your wallet.
Don’t touch your creditcard ever again ! Don’t believe in publicity, sell your TV.
Be happy with what you don’t have. Overspending led to overproduction,
together they led to the articificially overheated economy and the private debts.
Credits from the fed will aggravate the problem, they will only postpone the
moment where everybody will have to face the reality and rely on their own
resources. Presently, 80 000 $ is the debt per capita. It will increase if the fed and
government inject more money in the economy without structural reforms. The
same error is occurring at all levels : overspending by massively overestimating
one’s own financial capabilities.