Townhall...
A
Global
Recession?
by Larry
Kudlow
Is it
possible that we are already in a global recession but just don’t know
it yet?
And is the U.S. itself -- still the epicenter of the world economy --
standing
on the front edge of another recession?
I sincerely
hope I’m wrong. But warning signs are everywhere.
The
eurozone economy is flat on its back. Greece may be headed for a
political
crackup and an exit from the euro and European Union. Deposit runs in
Greece and
elsewhere are beginning, and a credit freeze throughout the continent
is not
out of the question. Meanwhile, emerging economies like China, India,
and
Brazil are slumping.
Here at
home, ex-Clinton strategists James Carville and Stan Greenberg sent a
memo to
President Obama telling him that his campaign message of slow and
steady
recovery progress is out of touch with Main Street America. They’re
right. Of
course, Obama’s “private sector is doing just fine” statement is part
and
parcel of his disconnect from economic reality.
And the
reality isn’t good. Whether you’re a Democrat or Republican, take a
look at the
numbers:
Job growth
has been slipping badly for three months. Retail sales and factory
orders are
down two straight months. Real incomes are flat. Household wealth is
way
underwater from the housing collapse, dropping nearly 40 percent in the
last
three measured years. And GDP was an anemic 1.9 percent in the first
quarter.
Nearly all leading Wall Street economists are marking down their
second-quarter
estimates to 2 percent or less.
But here’s
the key point: 2 percent growth is not a recovery. Many economists
would call
it a growth recession. When you get that low there’s little margin for
error. A
shock from Europe, an inventory selloff in the U.S., or almost any
unexpected
event could push us back into negative territory for an official
double-dip
recession.
The last
saving grace for the U.S.? Business sales and profits are still
trending
higher, although GDP-measured profits did fall in the first quarter.
That needs
to be watched carefully.
That said,
a recent IBD poll shows that the number of households with at least one
person
looking for employment is 23 percent. That translates to 30 million
people
looking for work. That’s not a recovery.
I can think
of two major reasons for the latest economic stall -- even inside an
overall
recovery rate that’s only half the normal pace of post-WWII recoveries.
First
is the deflationary impact of a sharp, nearly 10 percent rise in the
exchange
value of the dollar relative to the euro. That’s imparting a
deflationary
influence on the economy, where both import and producer prices have
recently
turned negative. The good side of commodity deflation is that oil and
retail
gas prices have fallen considerably; the bad side is that manufacturers
may
hold back production and that debtors have to climb out of deeper holes.
As someone
who always touts the merits of a strong King Dollar, why am I
complaining now
that we have one? That’s my second reason for the latest economic
stall: King
Dollar is not being accompanied by lower tax rates.
The
original supply-side growth model argued for a strong dollar and lower
taxes,
where the former keeps prices stable and the latter provides fresh
growth
incentives. But instead of easier taxes, a huge tax-hike cliff looms.
Big
problem. Wrong model. Anti-growth.
As the Bush
era tax cuts expire at year end, so do the temporary payroll tax cut
and the
alternative minimum tax patch. By some estimates, over $400 billion in
cash
will be pulled out of the economy in 2013, along with a rollback of
growth-oriented, marginal-tax-rate incentives. It’s hard to quantify,
but it’s
quite possible that business hiring plans and consumer-spending
expectations
have been put on hold until folks can figure out future tax policy.
All this is
why the tax-cliff problem needs to be solved immediately. If the tax
cuts are
extended sooner rather than later, the economy might straighten out
faster than
most folks think. But House Speaker John Boehner told me that while
he’s ready
to talk to President Obama, the phone isn’t ringing. And while House
Republicans are expected to pass a tax-cut extension in July, it won’t
go
anywhere without White House support.
Unfortunately,
the president is still talking about tax hikes on the rich. He should
listen to
Bill Clinton who argues for a full tax-cut extension to stop recession.
If we
wait until after the election to address the tax cliff, we will face
uncertainty and chaos, bringing us closer to recession.
Isn’t there
some way to nip this worst-case outcome in the bud?
Read this
and other articles at Townhall
|