US Federal Reserve cuts interest rates as recession deepens
By Patrick O’Connor
30 October 2008

The Federal Reserve yesterday cut its benchmark federal funds interest
rate by a half a percentage point to 1 percent. The rate reduction is
the Fed's second this month and brings the official interest rate down
to a record low first reached in 2003 and 2004.

The volatile US share markets recovered some ground in anticipation of
the rate cut, with the Dow Jones index closing 10.9 percent higher on
Tuesday. But yesterday the Dow declined in late trading, falling 0.82
percent.

New economic data released in the last two days provide further
evidence that the US economy has entered a severe recession.

The Conference Board released consumer confidence figures on Tuesday
showing that its index plunged to 38.0, the lowest mark recorded since
data was first kept in 1967. Consumer confidence was down from the
61.4 index rating in September, and considerably lower than what most
analysts had anticipated. John Ryding at RDQ Economics described the
October figures as "a shockingly weak reading."

Also released Tuesday was the S&P Case-Shiller index on housing
prices, which found that house prices across 20 surveyed cities fell
by 16.6 percent in August compared with the same period in 2007.
Houses in Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami and San Francisco suffered the
biggest declines of 25-30 percent. Goldman Sachs' economists predicted
that house prices will fall further by an average of 15 percent
nationally.

A Wall Street Journal article yesterday stated: "The current downturn
is shaping up to be worse than the recessions of 1990-91 and 2001 and
the prolonged downturn that ended in 1982. Banks are cutting back on
lending, consumers are spending less, companies are shedding jobs amid
sinking profits, and the housing bust that triggered the slide
persists."

One indicator of the rising social distress being felt by broad layers
of the population is the escalating credit card default rate.
According to the New York Times, lenders wrote off $21 billion in bad
credit card loans in the first six months this year. Analysts estimate
another $55 billion could be lost in the next 18 months.

Credit card companies have responded by targeting the victims of the
recession. The Times reported: "Lenders are shunning consumers already
in debt and cutting credit limits for existing cardholders, especially
those who live in areas ravaged by the housing crisis or who work in
troubled industries. In some cases, lenders are even reining in credit
lines after monitoring cardholders who shop at the same stores as
other risky borrowers or who have mortgages from certain companies."

Mass layoffs are being announced every day. Appliance maker Whirlpool
announced yesterday it would increase layoffs from the previously
announced 2,000 to 5,000 by the end of 2009. The sackings, which will
affect 7 percent of the company's total workforce, are driven by
slowing sales as consumers delay replacing malfunctioning appliances.
Whirlpool has cut production by 10 percent in the third quarter this
year and will reduce output by a further 20 percent in the US and
Europe in the fourth quarter by shutting plants.

Other recently announced layoffs include: telephone company Qwest
Communications, which is to cut 1,200 jobs; publishing giant Time
Inc., which plans to dismiss 6 percent of its workforce; Doubleday
Publishing, which has cut 10 percent of its staff; and newspaper
publisher Gannett, which is also slashing 10 percent of its staff, on
top of a 3 percent cut, affecting 1,000 workers, announced in August.

Workers in auto-related industries remain among the hardest hit.
Michelin's BFGoodrich is laying off up to 40 percent of its workforce
at a tire plant in Woodburn, Indiana for at least eight weeks in
response to lower demand from auto makers and customers. Similar cuts
are reportedly planned at two other BFGoodrich plants in Alabama,
affecting a total of 1,500 workers across the three factories.

Tenneco, which produces auto emission and ride control systems,
announced on Wednesday that it was cutting 1,100 jobs and closing five
plants. About 500 salaried workers will be laid off and 600 hourly
positions eliminated. The plant closures include one in Milan, Ohio,
another in Evansville, Indiana and an engineering operation centre in
Australia.

North American auto sales fell by 15.5 percent in the third quarter on
an annualized basis. General Motors' sales declined by 18.9 percent in
North America over the same period, and 11.4 percent globally. The
former industrial giant continues to lose hundreds of millions of
dollars each month. On Monday, ratings agency Moody's downgraded GM's
credit rating further into "junk" status. It is now just three rungs
above the lowest possible rating.

GM and Chrysler have reportedly resolved outstanding issues in their
merger negotiations and are now seeking the necessary financing from
the federal government. GM's chief executive Rick Wagoner has met with
officials in Washington to lobby for a handover of public funds,
modeled on the Bush administration's bailout of the financial sector.

Reuters cited sources who said GM was seeking $10 billion, while the
Treasury Department was reportedly considering $5 billion. According
to the news agency, a bailout "could include capital injections and
government purchases of bad auto loans." The Wall Street Journal said
on Monday that the public money may be channeled through the Energy
Department, by diverting a portion of the $25 billion in low-interest
loans approved last month for the auto industry to build more
efficient vehicles.

A publicly-assisted financing operation for a GM-Chrysler merger would
have a devastating social impact. The top executives responsible for
running their companies into the ground will no doubt either retain
their lucrative salary packages or be offered multi-million-dollar
"golden handshakes" on their way out. Auto workers, on the other hand,
will be asked to make even greater sacrifices and swallow further
attacks on their jobs, wages, and conditions.

An article in yesterday's Guardian gave some indication of the
potential effect of a merger between the US auto giants: "The
manufacturers employ 355,000 people directly but support an estimated
4.5 million further jobs in industries from steel to plastics,
electronics and computer chips. The non-profit Centre for Automotive
Research in Michigan has estimated that a failure of Ford or GM could
take a toll of 2 percent on the gross domestic product and would
jeopardize as many as 2 million jobs."

The economic crisis is seeing merger proposals across a number of
sectors. In the airline industry, Delta Air Lines and Northwest this
week received Department of Justice approval for their planned union,
which will create the world's largest airline company. Thousands more
jobs will inevitably be lost in the sector as a result.

The rapidity of the economic downturn has alarmed a number of
economists who are now warning of a potential deflationary crisis. The
Wall Street Journal cited the comments of former Federal Reserve
governor Laurence Meyer: "The expected rise in the unemployment rate,
paired with the rising threat of deflation, presents a risk that the
[Fed] will have to ease even further, perhaps all the way to a zero
federal funds rate."

In yesterday's Financial Times, senior columnist Martin Wolf wrote:
"[T]he idea that a quick recession would purge the world of past
excesses is ludicrous. The danger is, instead, of a slump, as a
mountain of private debt—in the US, equal to three times GDP—topples
over into mass bankruptcy ... Globalisation would spread the
catastrophe everywhere. Many of the victims would be innocent of past
excesses, while many of the most guilty would retain their ill-gotten
gains. This would be a recipe not for a revival of 19th-century
laissez faire, but for xenophobia, nationalism and revolution."

This extraordinary statement underscores just how conscious sections
of the ruling elite are of the likelihood that a prolonged world
economic crisis will trigger major social and political upheavals.

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