Townhall
Finance...
Why
Businesses Aren’t Investing in the U.S.
by Larry
Kudlow
May 6, 2012
Businesses
aren’t investing in the United States because of a lack of consumer
demand,
International Paper CEO John Faraci said Friday.
“I think
this was all about consumer spending and demand. You know, the problem
we have
is there’s inadequate demand to create jobs. We know how to respond
when there
is demand,” he said on CNBC’s “The Kudlow Report.”
The U.S.
Commerce Department estimated that gross domestic product expanded at a
2.2
percent annual rate in the first quarter, falling short of analysts’
expectations it would grow 2.5 percent and slowing down from the fourth
quarter’s 3-percent rate.
Consumer
spending has been damped partly because the nationwide housing market
has yet
to recover, he said.
“Until it
does, we’re not going to see the kind of consumer spending you would
expect
coming out of a recovery,” he said.
Asked again
by host Larry Kudlow why companies were not investing, Faraci once more
pointed
to demand that has not materialized.
“Productivity
has obviously been very good, so we’re creating more capacity with less
resources. But at the end of the day, this is really about responding
to
demand, whether it’s automobiles or packaging products we make for a
whole
variety of industries and end users,” he said.
“We’re
investing in India. We’re investing in Russia. We’re investing in
Brazil. Not
to ship products back here but because demand exists in those markets,”
he
said. “At the end of the day, this is really about responding to
demand. We’re
not going to go out and invest unless there’s demand.”
Earlier in
the day, International Paper posted a better-than-expected quarterly
profit on
strong sales of shipping boxes and paper.
“I feel
very good about the rest of the year,”Faraci told Reuters. “It’s not a
macro-bullish story. It’s a macro-positive story.”
Don
Peebles, CEO of Peebles Corp., a real estate developer, said that
housing
remains a drag on the economy.
A strong
market, cheap money and high leverage fueled growth before the
financial
crisis, he said.
“What’s
happening now is the housing market is not able to carry the economy,”
he said.
“Americans’ wealth has been decimated as a result of the lost value in
their
homes.”
Peebles
also acknowledged, as the only small-business owner, that rising
health-care
costs and uncertainty over taxes were a challenge. But, he added, the
No. 1
issue was access to capital.
Mort
Zuckerman, founder of real estate investment trust Boston Properties
and
publisher of the New York Daily News and U.S. News & World
Report, took aim
at the slow growth.
Zuckerman
blamed the housing-market collapse, as well as health-care costs and
what he
called an “inadequate, badly structured stimulus program.”
“Clearly,
you should’ve had a GDP growth now of somewhere between 6 and 8
percent, with
the degree of monetary and fiscal stimulus,” he said.
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