CNNMoney.com
 
Lost decade: The new threat to the U.S.  economy
 
By Chris Isidore, 
senior writer July 15, 2010




NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The risk of a double-dip recession is getting a  
lot of attention, but even that grim prediction could prove a little too  
optimistic. 
Disappointing _job reports_ 
(http://money.cnn.com/2010/07/02/news/economy/jobs_june/index.htm?postversion=2010070211)
 , weakness in _housing_ 
(http://money.cnn.com/2010/07/01/real_estate/may_pending_home_sales/index.htm?postvers
ion=2010070111)  and _consumer spending_ 
(http://money.cnn.com/2010/07/14/news/economy/retail_sales/index.htm?postversion=2010071409)
  and problems in 
world financial  markets have raised concerns about the U.S. economy 
stalling out later this  year. Now some economists are starting to talk about 
an 
even worse fate: a  prolonged period of very weak growth, a so-called "lost 
decade." 

The probability of a lost decade is significantly greater than a double  
dip," said Sung Won Sohn, economics professor at Cal State University Channel  
Islands.  
"We don't have too many engines of growth functioning right now -- housing, 
 consumer spending, exports are all sputtering. I have a hard time seeing 
where  we can get 3% economic growth back." 
A lost decade, or something like it, could feel like a never-ending 
recession  to many Americans, as the economy does not grow fast enough to 
recoup 
lost jobs,  and investments like homes and stocks continue to lose value. 
The most famous lost decade occurred in Japan in the 1990s. From 1992 
through  1999, the Japanese economy grew by less than 1% a year. It has yet to 
fully  recover from the economic weakness and falling prices it suffered 
during that  period. 
There are a number of similarities between conditions in Japan in the 
1990's  and the United States today. Japan had a real estate bubble inflate and 
then  burst, resulting in banks choked with bad loans on their balance sheets 
and a  cutback in lending. 
The Bank of Japan did what it could to spur the economy, including cutting  
its key interest rate to near 0% and pumping money into the economy through 
 asset purchases, just as the Federal Reserve has done over the last two 
years.  But those steps had limited effectiveness. 
And Japan suffered through bouts of deflation, in which falling prices 
caused  businesses to cut production and employment, a scenario all too 
familiar 
to U.S.  workers.  
Deflation has been relatively rare in U.S. history,  with no significant 
examples since the Great Depression. But with inflation  nearly non-existent, 
some Federal Reserve policymakers said at their June  meeting that they were 
_worried about the threat of deflation_ 
(http://money.cnn.com/2010/07/14/news/economy/fed_outlook/index.htm?postversion=2010071415)
 . 
Sohn puts the chance of a prolonged period of weak growth as high as 40%,  
with the chance of a double dip only 20%-25%. 
"If I had a choice I would much rather have a double dip and be done with 
it.  A lost decade is much more dangerous, economically, socially and 
politically,"  said Sohn.
 
The growth produced during U.S. recoveries has been trending lower over the 
 last 40 years or more, according to Lakshman Achuthan, managing director 
of  Economic Cycle Research Institute. He believes underlying changes in the 
economy  will cause that trend to continue. 
Achuthan said he's worried that with increased volatility, recessions are  
likely to become more frequent, causing the economy to lose more ground in  
upcoming recessions than it is able to recover from during growth periods. 
"That's how you lose a decade," he said. "You get stuck in an era when you  
spend more time in recession than expansion." 
James Hamilton, professor of economics, University of California San Diego, 
 said much of past economic growth was built upon unsustainable deficit 
spending,  by both governments and households. Huge, persistent trade deficits 
also  provided a drag on the U.S. economy. It will require some painful 
structural  changes to free the economy from those constraints. 
"The pattern for growth we had been relying upon was unsustainable," he 
said.  "These are long-term challenges." While he believes a double-dip 
recession will  be avoided, weak growth is the best we can hope for, at least 
in 
the next few  years. 
Plenty of economists believe there are significant differences between 
Japan  in the 1990s and the United States today, and that another lost decade 
is 
 unlikely. They point to Japan's shrinking population compared to the 
growing  U.S. population, as well as Japan's dependence on exports, rather than 
internal  consumption, to drive the economy.  
"You can draw some parallels, but while history can rhyme, it rarely  
repeats," said Carl Riccadonna, senior U.S. economist for Deutsche Bank. But  
while he doesn't expect a U.S. lost decade, even Riccadonna is not expecting  
strong growth. 
"We're definitely looking at a subpar recovery," he  said.

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