Forget the Happy Talk: 
Longer, Deeper Recession Lies Ahead, Execs Warn
Tue, 12/22/2009 - 14:08 - dlindorff

If you google "recession easing," you will find articles all the way back to 
April quoting Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke as saying that the 
recession is easing, and that the economy is "improving modestly." 
Newspapers too, on their own, have written rosy-tinged stories about how 
things are bad but getting better.

Spins get put on every hint of good news, as when last month "only" 11,000 
jobs were lost (a story that was quickly followed by an "unexpected" jump in 
new unemployment claims by 474,000 in early December).

What didn't get widely reported was a
 report by the Association of Financial Professionals, 
a trade association that includes CFOs, treasurers, 
comptrollers, and risk managers of mid-sized and large corporations, which 
asked over 1000 of these executives the question: "When do you expect your 
company to begin hiring again?"

The answer tells you all you need to know about the depth of the current 
economic crisis, and blows all the media and government happy talk out of 
the water.

This Outlook Survey by the APF, which was funded by Wells Fargo Bank, shows 
that 26 percent of executives expect to see their company payrolls continue 
to shrink in 2010, while 46% more expect employoment to stay at current low 
levels. Put another way,only 25% of companies surveyed expect to return to 
pre-recession hiring levels in 2011, while 32% don't expect a hiring rebound 
until 2012. And fully 30% "do not expect their organizations ever to return 
their payrolls to pre-recessionary levels."

And here's another troubling bit of news. The same survey respondents say 
that their companies' access to credit--the willingness of banks to 
lend--has barely budged. In fact only one in six reported that the had found 
credit a little easier to obtain in the last six months, while one in five 
actually reported that it had become harder to obtain credit. So much for 
the Obama administration's and the Federal Reserve's vaunted efforts to 
throw so much money--literally trillions of dollars--at the banks that they 
would start lending.

More than half of the executives responding to the survey said that if 
credit doesn't become more accessible by mid-2010, their firms will have to 
take steps to conserve cash--steps which could include cutting capital 
spending (68%), freezing or cutting hiring (62%), cutting inventory (25%), 
delaying payments to suppliers (23%), tightening credit offered to customers 
(23%) and drawing down existing credit lines (22%). Note that all of these 
steps are things that would put a further drag on the economy and could push 
it into a second downward spiral.

Remember this survey the next time you read that President Obama or Fed 
Chief Bernanke or Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says the economy is 
coming back, or that the unemployment situation, while bad, is about to 
start turning around.

The executives who are making business plans for their companies, and who 
are looking at the cash flowing out and the empty order books, aren't so 
sanguine about the future. And if those hiring plans are correct, this is a 
recession from which the economy simply is not going to recover, at least 
for many working people whose jobs are never coming back.

The bad news from finance executives lends added weight to a warning by 
Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz who says there is a "significant chance" 
that the US economy will slip back into a decline in the coming year, going 
from a U-shaped recession to a "W-shaped" one--a dreaded double-dip 
recession, with slumping economic activity leading to worsening layoffs, 
more bankruptcies, and more pressure on the government to finally take 
dramatic action on jobs.

Currently a professor at Columbia University, Stiglitz, a former chief 
economist at the World Bank, says the government should act now to help 
state and local governments, which are running out of money, and to create 
new jobs. He warned the Obama administration, "If you don't prepare now, and 
the economy turns out to be as weak as I think it's likely to be, then 
you'll be in a very difficult position."


 

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