http://robertreich.org/post/4218613020

The Truth About the Economy that Nobody In Washington Or On Wall 
Street Will Admit: We’re Heading Back Toward a Double Dip

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Why aren’t Americans being told the truth about the economy? We’re 
heading in the direction of a double dip – but you’d never know it 
if you listened to the upbeat messages coming out of Wall Street 
and Washington.

Consumers are 70 percent of the American economy, and consumer 
confidence is plummeting. It’s weaker today on average than at the 
lowest point of the Great Recession.

The Reuters/University of Michigan survey shows a 10 point decline 
in March – the tenth largest drop on record. Part of that drop is 
attributable to rising fuel and food prices. A separate Conference 
Board’s index of consumer confidence, just released, shows 
consumer confidence at a five-month low — and a large part is due 
to expectations of fewer jobs and lower wages in the months ahead.

Pessimistic consumers buy less. And fewer sales spells economic 
trouble ahead.

What about the 192,000 jobs added in February? (We’ll know more 
Friday about how many jobs were added in March.) It’s peanuts 
compared to what’s needed. Remember, 125,000 new jobs are 
necessary just to keep up with a growing number of Americans 
eligible for employment. And the nation has lost so many jobs over 
the last three years that even at a rate of 200,000 a month we 
wouldn’t get back to 6 percent unemployment until 2016.

But isn’t the economy growing again – by an estimated 2.5 to 2.9 
percent this year? Yes, but that’s even less than peanuts. The 
deeper the economic hole, the faster the growth needed to get back 
on track. By this point in the so-called recovery we’d expect 
growth of 4 to 6 percent.

Consider that back in 1934, when it was emerging from the deepest 
hole of the Great Depression, the economy grew 7.7 percent. The 
next year it grew over 8 percent. In 1936 it grew a whopping 14.1 
percent.

Add two other ominous signs: Real hourly wages continue to fall, 
and housing prices continue to drop. Hourly wages are falling 
because with unemployment so high, most people have no bargaining 
power and will take whatever they can get. Housing is dropping 
because of the ever-larger number of homes people have walked away 
from because they can’t pay their mortgages. But because homes the 
biggest asset most Americans own, as home prices drop most 
Americans feel even poorer.

There’s no possibility government will make up for the coming 
shortfall in consumer spending. To the contrary, government is 
worsening the situation. State and local governments are slashing 
their budgets by roughly $110 billion this year. The federal 
stimulus is ending, and the federal government will end up cutting 
some $30 billion from this year’s budget.

In other words: Watch out. We may avoid a double dip but the 
economy is slowing ominously, and the booster rockets are 
disappearing.

So why aren’t we getting the truth about the economy? For one 
thing, Wall Street is buoyant – and most financial news you hear 
comes from the Street. Wall Street profits soared to $426.5 
billion last quarter, according to the Commerce Department. (That 
gain more than offset a drop in the profits of non-financial 
domestic companies.) Anyone who believes the Dodd-Frank financial 
reform bill put a stop to the Street’s creativity hasn’t been 
watching.

To the extent non-financial companies are doing well, they’re 
making most of their money abroad. Since 1992, for example, G.E.’s 
offshore profits have risen $92 billion, from $15 billion (which 
is one reason it pays no U.S. taxes). In fact, the only group 
that’s optimistic about the future are CEOs of big American 
companies. The Business Roundtable’s economic outlook index, which 
surveys 142 CEOs, is now at its highest point since it began in 2002.

Washington, meanwhile, doesn’t want to sound the economic alarm. 
The White House and most Democrats want Americans to believe the 
economy is on an upswing.

Republicans, for their part, worry that if they tell it like it is 
Americans will want government to do more rather than less. They’d 
rather not talk about jobs and wages, and put the focus instead on 
deficit reduction (or spread the lie that by reducing the deficit 
we’ll get more jobs and higher wages).

I’m sorry to have to deliver the bad news, but it’s better you know.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to