London Telegraph
 
 
 
With the US trapped in depression, this really is starting to feel like  
1932
The US workforce shrank by 652,000 in June, one of the sharpest 
contractions  ever. The rate of hourly earnings fell 0.1pc. Wages are flirting 
with 
deflation. 

 

 
 
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Published: 9:33PM BST 04 Jul  2010



 
"The economy is still in the gravitational pull of the Great Recession,"  
said Robert Reich, former US labour secretary. "All the booster rockets for  
getting us beyond it are failing." 
 
"Home sales are down. Retail sales are down. Factory orders in May suffered 
 their biggest tumble since March of last year. So what are we doing about 
it?  Less than nothing," he said.  
California is tightening faster than Greece. State workers have seen a 14pc 
 fall in earnings this year due to forced furloughs. Governor Arnold  
Schwarzenegger is cutting pay for 200,000 state workers to the minimum wage of  
$7.25 an hour to cover his $19bn (£15bn) deficit.  
Can Illinois be far behind? The state has a deficit of $12bn and is $5bn in 
 arrears to schools, nursing homes, child care centres, and prisons. "It is 
 getting worse every single day," said state comptroller Daniel Hynes. "We 
are  not paying bills for absolutely essential services. That is obscene."  
Roughly a million Americans have dropped out of the jobs market altogether  
over the past two months. That is the only reason why the headline 
unemployment  rate is not exploding to a post-war high.  
Let us be honest. The US is still trapped in depression a full 18 months 
into  zero interest rates, quantitative easing (QE), and fiscal stimulus that 
has  pushed the budget deficit above 10pc of GDP.  
The share of the US working-age population with jobs in June actually fell  
from 58.7pc to 58.5pc. This is the real stress indicator. The ratio was 
63pc  three years ago. Eight million jobs have been lost.  
The average time needed to find a job has risen to a record 35.2 weeks.  
Nothing like this has been seen before in the post-war era. Jeff Weniger, of  
Harris Private Bank, said this compares with a peak of 21.2 weeks in the 
Volcker  recession of the early 1980s.  
"Legions of individuals have been left with stale skills, and little 
prospect  of finding meaningful work, and benefits that are being exhausted. By 
our math  the crop of people who are unemployed but not receiving a check 
amounts to  9.2m."  
Republicans on Capitol Hill are filibustering a bill to extend the dole for 
 up to 1.2m jobless facing an imminent cut-off. Dean Heller from Nevada 
called  them "hobos". This really is starting to feel like 1932.  
Washington's fiscal stimulus is draining away. It peaked in the first  
quarter, yet even then the economy eked out a growth rate of just 2.7pc. This  
compares with 5.1pc, 9.3pc, 8.1pc and 8.5pc in the four quarters coming off  
recession in the early 1980s.  
The housing market is already crumbling as government props are pulled 
away.  The expiry of homebuyers' tax credit led to a 30pc fall in the number of 
buyers  signing contracts in May. "It is cataclysmic," said David Bloom from 
HSBC.  
Federal tax rises are automatically baked into the pie. The Congressional  
Budget Office said fiscal policy will swing from 
a net +2pc of GDP to -2pc  by late 2011. The states and counties may have 
to cut as much as $180bn.  
Investors are starting to chew over the awful possibility that America's  
recovery will stall just as Asia hits the buffers. China's manufacturing 
index  has been falling since January, with a downward lurch in June to 50.4, 
just  above the break-even line of 50. Momentum seems to be flagging 
everywhere,  whether in Australian building permits, Turkish exports, or 
Japanese 
industrial  output.  
On Friday, Jacques Cailloux from RBS put out a "double-dip alert" for 
Europe.  "The risk is rising fast. Absent an effective policy intervention to 
tackle the  debt crisis on the periphery over coming months, the European 
economy will  double dip in 2011," he said.  
It is obvious what that policy should be for Europe, America, and Japan. If 
 budgets are to shrink in an orderly fashion over several years – as they 
must,  to avoid sovereign debt spirals – then central banks will have to 
cushion the  blow keeping monetary policy ultra-loose for as long it takes.  
The Fed is already eyeing the printing press again. "It's appropriate to  
think about what we would do under a deflationary scenario," said Dennis  
Lockhart for the Atlanta Fed. His colleague Kevin Warsh said the pros and cons  
of purchasing more bonds should be subject to "strict scrutiny", a comment 
I  took as confirmation that the Fed Board is arguing internally about QE2.  
Perhaps naively, I still think central banks have the tools to head off  
disaster. The question is whether they will do so fast enough, or even whether 
 they wish to resist the chorus of 1930s liquidation taking charge of the 
debate.  Last week the Bank for International Settlements called for combined 
fiscal and  monetary tightening, lending its great authority to the forces 
of debt-deflation  and mass unemployment. If even the BIS has lost the plot, 
God help us. 

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