http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/09/22/7900826-recessions-second-act-would-be-worse-than-the-first

Recession's second act would be worse than the first
By John W. Schoen, Senior Producer

Fresh evidence of a global economic slowdown has raised fears that 
governments around the world may be powerless to reverse it. If 
the world does fall into back into recession, it could be much 
harder to escape than the contraction that ended in 2009.

With banks still recovering from a decade-long credit bubble, 
governments slashing spending to cope with unsustainable debt, and 
unemployment at levels not seen in decades, a new recession would 
be “disastrous,” according to Roger Altman, a senior Treasury 
official in the Clinton administration.

“We could be in for a repeat of the experience of 1937, when 
America fell back into recession after three years of recovery 
from the Great Depression,” he wrote in the Financial Times.

Altman was referring to the fact the global downturn of the 1930s 
technically included two U.S. recessions, from 1929 to 1933 and 
again from 1937 to 1938. U.S. unemployment peaked at over 20 
percent in the 1930s, according to historical estimates, and did 
not decline significantly until factories began gearing up for 
World War II.

Two years after the latest U.S. recession technically ended, 
evidence continues to build that the weak recovery is stalling 
out. The U.S. economy stopped producing new jobs in August after a 
string of mostly meager monthly job gains that failed to bring the 
unemployment rate below 9 percent.

On Thursday, fresh data showed the Eurozone's service sector 
contracting for the first time in two years; a separate index of 
the manufacturing sector, which has provided much of the region’s 
growth, slowed for the second month in a row.

A global stock sell-off that dragged market indices to their 
lowest level of the year spread to the U.S., where the Dow Jones 
industrial average was down nearly 400 points.

Until recently, there were hopes that emerging economies in places 
like China and Brazil could prop up global growth until a stronger 
recovery took hold elsewhere. But China’s two biggest export 
markets -- Europe and the United States -- are struggling, and 
that has cut into demand for Chinese goods. A report out Thursday 
showed that China’s factories slowed for the third month in a row.

"There is a global slowdown,” Jeavon Lolay, head of global 
research at Lloyds Banking Group, told Reuters. “There is no doubt 
the risks of a global recession have grown."

That’s also the opinion of Federal Reserve policymakers, who said 
Wednesday they saw "significant downside risks" to the U.S. 
economy after deciding to launch an unusual program of reshuffling 
$400 billion in Treasury holdings to try to push interest rates lower.

But with interest rates already at record lows, few expect the 
program to do much to increase the demand for loans. Businesses 
face weak demand for their products and services and consumers are 
continuing to work to pay down their debts. Though mortgage rates 
remain at record lows, millions of homeowners are unable to 
refinance their higher rate loans because they owe more than their 
home is worth.

Some analysts argue that the Fed’s latest move (dubbed Operation 
Twist because it “twists” the relationship between short- and 
long-term rates), will hurt economic growth because it will 
squeeze bank profits and lower the income consumers earn on their 
savings. Public and private pension funds, already under strain, 
will be even more badly underfunded because they’ll have to set 
aside more money to generate the same amount of cash to pay 
retiree benefits.

“In a couple of weeks (Operation Twist) will be a subject for 
economic history, and the main discussion will be that the Fed is 
grasping at straws,” former Fed governor William Poole told CNBC. 
“I think that they have thrown lead into the life preserver, and 
they are sinking.”

‘Slow motion train crash’

European central bankers appear increasingly unable to contain a 
widening banking crisis, sparked by the threat of bond defaults in 
Greece and Italy, Europe’s third-largest economy.

The International Monetary Fund warned Tuesday that Europe and the 
United States could slip back into recession next year without 
bold action

"We are seeing a slow-motion train crash in the euro area, where 
credit contraction risks leading to a new recession by Christmas 
unless governments face up to the task swiftly and forcefully," 
Martin Enlund, market strategist at the Swedish bank Handelsbanken 
told Reuters.

Policymakers in China, the world’s third largest economy behind 
the U.S. and EU, face their own set of tough choices. Rapid growth 
rate has fueled inflation that is running at a double-digit rate, 
according to analysts -- much higher than official targets.  To 
contain inflation, Beijing has raised interest rates five times 
and lifted banks' reserve requirements nine times since October. 
If it clamps down too hard, though, a deeper economic slowdown 
could reverse China's efforts to lift hundreds of millions of 
people out of poverty.

China is also coping with a banking hangover of its own, after 
years of massive government lending for expansion of state-owned 
enterprises an infrastructure upgrades.

"There is a two-tier system within China and I think the lending 
that's taking place and the percentage of nonperforming loans is 
now at a level that is disturbing," David McAlvany, chief 
executive at McAlvany Financial Group told CNBC. "Ultimately, 
(China's banks) will have to see some comeuppance."
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