5 Myths About the Economic 'Recovery'

October 2, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Surprise. That economic recovery we keep hearing about seems to be playing hide-and-seek.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and others have said that, technically speaking, the recession is over. The stock market has been charging forward, with a 58 percent gain between the lows of March and a September peak. But companies keep cutting jobs, with the unemployment rate creeping up to 9.8 percent in September. It would already have hit 10 percent if not for discouraged workers who lost their jobs months ago and have stopped looking for work. Meanwhile, a lot of things could still go wrong, even if we pretend otherwise. Here are some of the misconceptions about the economic recovery:

The pain will subside. Sooner or later it will, but the pain could actually intensify over the next several months. That's because unemployment is expected to get worse until early or mid-2010. More laid-off workers will exhaust their unemployment benefits, forcing more drastic lifestyle cutbacks than they've made already. That will force deeper cutbacks in consumer spending and prolong a recovery. "The recession is technically over, but that means we're at the moment of maximum pain," says Dirk van Dijk of Zacks Equity Research. "If you're tumbling down a cliff, it hurts the most once you're lying at the bottom."

[See why the new frugality isn't catching on.]

A recovery will be consistent and quick. We seemed to plunge into recession with reckless abandon, so it would be nice to think that once we've bounced off the bottom, we'll climb right back out. But that's not how recessions typically end. "Recessions are stop-and-go affairs," says economist Gary Shilling. "Seven of the last eight recessions have had at least one positive quarter before the recession picked up again." Instead of a pronounced recovery, it's more likely we'll muddle along for months, maybe even years.

There won't be another recession. Sure, economic growth is probably positive right now, which would technically indicate that the recession is over. But that doesn't guarantee that the economy will keep growing. A bust in commercial real estate is still in the beginning stages and could persist for a couple of years. Bank losses on mortgages and consumer loans are getting worse, not better. And few, if any, parts of the economy are strong enough to propel a robust recovery. Moody's Economy.com says the odds of a double-dip recession—another six months or more of declining economic activity—are 29 percent. That's lower than earlier this year, but not low enough.

[See 6 ways the recession will change retirement.]

Consumers are regaining confidence. Yes, confidence measures have improved over the past several months. But consumer confidence is very fickle and closely related to the job market, which is getting worse. The stock market rally has helped restore some lost wealth and generated hopeful headlines, but it could turn around and bring confidence down with it. Instead of an uninterrupted improvement, consumer confidence will probably drift upward over time in fits and starts, mirroring the sputtering economy itself.

[See why a housing rebound could take 20 years.]

Things will get back to normal before long. Don't count on it. Odds are that the Great Recession will force lasting changes in our quality of life. The twin miseries of a housing bust and stock market correction have wiped out an astounding $14 trillion in Americans' net worth, and that money isn't coming back soon. It could be 10 to 20 years before housing values have regained the peaks of 2006, and talk about a new bull market for stocks could be as hollow as those old predictions about the Dow hitting 20,000 or 30,000. And millions of consumers are simply tapped out, with too much debt and far too little savings for retirement or emergencies. If a miraculous recovery suddenly materializes, we'll all celebrate. But it's more likely that all these economic wounds will heal slowly, and leave scars.

Tags:
recession

Reader Comments Read all comments (82)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Many ofl the above comments seem to share isolationist solutions. It's easy to rationalize. The basic problem is us, however. Americans (like the rest of the world) are two-faced. We buy cheap, but want to maintain our lifestyles.

Look at Wall-Mart. It became the largest retailer right here in our own country. How? Underpricing everyone else. How? Low wages and unbelievable buying power, putting legions of would-be's out of business, especially family owned businesses. Why? As soon as a WalMart opens, dozens of local stores dissappear because everyone shops there instead, and then wonders why there are no jobs.

Look at any small town, USA. Main streets are everything but, these days, with boarded up store-fronts, empty factories and emptier savings accounts. We have become a "merchant" economy instead of producers. There's not much interest in paying a middle man these days: enter the internet marketplace. We don't even buy from stores anymore: EBAY, Amazon, et. al.

Americans talk "buy American" but buy Honda/Toyota/and now Hundai. Our middle class cost of living cannot compete globally, in manufacturing or labor intensive endeavors. Period. Everyone wants a good salary, comprehensive benefits, top health care, but we buy foreign made stuff and outsource our jobs to somewhere else. Aren't you tired of talking to Indians when you call a product support help line??

All this talk about "added value" is lost on the consumer. We sacrifice value in order to afford the product. Hell, even Mercedes makes $20,000 cars now!!

I've decided it's all FED-EX's fault! They made the world so small, anything can be made anywhere and shipped to your store/home/factory by tomorrow!!!

The local factory/mill/farm is now unnecessary. You can have it tomorrow for half the price.

Globalization might be wonderful for the up-and-coming countries of the world but it's not so great for the leaders. Think about that the next time you buy a Honda, shop at Wal Mart or order some electronics on-line.

Have a good day.

WL of CA 9:05AM June 02, 2010

Both of these go hand in hand. all of your are consumers of products and you look for good deals. My question to anyone: do you purchase products made ONLY by USA? (If you answered yes, you believe most of the marketing hype). Some component in everything purchased is probably non-USA produced.

Regardless how hard you might try, products are created from all around the world and we all do benefit from this. If Japan had not changed their quality on motorcycles and cars, none of US auto makers would have followed and created better quality and more safety rich cars. They were forced to change but did not change fast enough. They still lag.

Read basic economic books on comparative advantage. This has been going on since the very early days before America was found. Trade routes opened up to trade spices, food/vegtables, clothing, gundpowder, etc was traded from one area that had the knowledge to produce (cheaper) than other areas. The areas that purchased these goods found what products they had to compete and sell to these areas (in some case, it was gold).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_advantage

US can must use any global labor source available. If we do not use these resources, we would quickly erode to nothing since every other country and company would. US's eroison to a 3rd world country will be accelerated, not delayed. Our products probably could not compete on many fronts (cost, quality, features) by being in isolation. And as the PacRim starts to develop their large populations, US will not be the largest market for products. China and India have far more people than the US and their disposable income is still very low to US but has dramatically risen over the past 10 years.

Bill of TX 7:15PM May 03, 2010

Originally, a business could only sponsor a work visa for an individual in a field of service that we, as a Nation, lacked sufficient numbers of indigenous working citizens for. That is to say, you weren't allowed to bring in people to do a job when there were plenty of qualified American people here willing to do it. Loopholes in those laws enacted in the past 8 years now allow work visa's to anyone that wants one, even when we have plenty of qualified unemployed people here. They even gave tax credits to businesses that outsourced overseas.

What we need is to close the loopholes, then tax any companies for having non-American workers/outsourcing, making it unprofitable. Then, make a new tax credit for employing American citizens, making it more profitable. We also should have higher taxes on non-citizen workers to help off-set their practices of underbidding us by refusing benefits/pension/etc. It's gotten so bad that some companies have even stopped offering benefits or pensions since they can find plenty of non-citizens who don't need or want them (since they are planning to go home to retire after 2-5 years of working here).

These problems didn't spring up overnight nor are they the product of any one leader. They've been slowly eroding us for the past 20+ years and are only now coming to fruition. Now it's time to pay the bill. Let us hope they can get it right for a change before there's nothing left to save.

Save America of DE 11:03AM March 29, 2010

Rick Newman

Rick Newman

The global economy is mysterious, even scary. Chief Business Correspondent Rick Newman connects the dots. In addition to his writing for U.S. News, Rick is the co-author of two books: Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11, and Bury Us Upside Down: The Misty Pilots and the Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail.


Read Rick's latest blog entries here.

advertisement

advertisement