Nouriel Roubini
Nouriel Roubini, a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business and Chairman of Roubini Global Economics, was one of the few economists to predict the recent global financial crisis. One of the worl…Full profile
American Pie in the Sky
CommentsNEW
YORK – While the risk of a disorderly crisis in the eurozone is well
recognized, a more sanguine view of the United States has prevailed. For
the last three years, the consensus has been that the US economy was on
the verge of a robust and self-sustaining recovery that would restore
above-potential growth. That turned out to be wrong, as a painful
process of balance-sheet deleveraging – reflecting excessive
private-sector debt, and then its carryover to the public sector –
implies that the recovery will remain, at best, below-trend for many
years to come.
CommentsEven
this year, the consensus got it wrong, expecting a recovery to
above-trend annual GDP growth – faster than 3%. But the first-half
growth rate looks set to come in closer to 1.5% at best, even below
2011’s dismal 1.7%. And now, after getting the first half of 2012 wrong,
many are repeating the fairy tale that a combination of lower oil
prices, rising auto sales, recovering house prices, and a resurgence of
US manufacturing will boost growth in the second half of the year and
fuel above-potential growth by 2013.
CommentsThe
reality is the opposite: for several reasons, growth will slow further
in the second half of 2012 and be even lower in 2013 – close to stall
speed. First, growth in the second quarter has decelerated from a
mediocre 1.8% in January-March, as job creation – averaging 70,000 a
month – fell sharply.
CommentsSecond,
expectations of the “fiscal cliff” – automatic tax increases and
spending cuts set for the end of this year – will keep spending and
growth lower through the second half of 2012. So will uncertainty about
who will be President in 2013; about tax rates and spending levels;
about the threat of another government shutdown over the debt ceiling;
and about the risk of another sovereign rating downgrade should
political gridlock continue to block a plan for medium-term fiscal
consolidation. In such conditions, most firms and consumers will be
cautious about spending – an option value of waiting – thus further
weakening the economy.
CommentsThird,
the fiscal cliff would amount to a 4.5%-of-GDP drag on growth in 2013
if all tax cuts and transfer payments were allowed to expire and
draconian spending cuts were triggered. Of course, the drag will be much
smaller, as tax increases and spending cuts will be much milder. But,
even if the fiscal cliff turns out to be a mild growth bump – a mere
0.5% of GDP – and annual growth at the end of the year is just 1.5%, as
seems likely, the fiscal drag will suffice to slow the economy to stall
speed: a growth rate of barely 1%.
CommentsFourth,
private consumption growth in the last few quarters does not reflect
growth in real wages (which are actually falling). Rather, growth in
disposable income (and thus in consumption) has been sustained since
last year by another $1.4 trillion in tax cuts and extended transfer
payments, implying another $1.4 trillion of public debt. Unlike the
eurozone and the United Kingdom, where a double-dip recession is already
under way, owing to front-loaded fiscal austerity, the US has prevented
some household deleveraging through even more public-sector
releveraging – that is, by stealing some growth from the future.
CommentsIn
2013, as transfer payments are phased out, however gradually, and as
some tax cuts are allowed to expire, disposable income growth and
consumption growth will slow. The US will then face not only the direct
effects of a fiscal drag, but also its indirect effect on private
spending.
CommentsFifth,
four external forces will further impede US growth: a worsening
eurozone crisis; an increasingly hard landing for China; a generalized
slowdown of emerging-market economies, owing to cyclical factors (weak
advanced-country growth) and structural causes (a state-capitalist model
that reduces potential growth); and the risk of higher oil prices in
2013 as negotiations and sanctions fail to convince Iran to abandon its
nuclear program.
CommentsPolicy
responses will have very limited effect in stemming the US economy’s
deceleration toward stall speed: even with only a mild fiscal drag on
growth, the US dollar is likely to strengthen as the eurozone crisis
weakens the euro and as global risk aversion returns. The US Federal
Reserve will carry out more quantitative easing this year, but it will
be ineffective: long-term interest rates are already very low, and
lowering them further would not boost spending. Indeed, the credit
channel is frozen and velocity has collapsed, with banks hoarding
increases in base money in the form of excess reserves. Moreover, the
dollar is unlikely to weaken as other countries also carry out
quantitative easing.
CommentsSimilarly,
the gravity of weaker growth will most likely overcome the levitational
effect on equity prices from more quantitative easing, particularly
given that equity valuations today are not as depressed as they were in
2009 or 2010. Indeed, growth in earnings and profits is now running out
of steam, as the effect of weak demand on top-line revenues takes a toll
on bottom-line margins and profitability.
CommentsA
significant equity-price correction could, in fact, be the force that
in 2013 tips the US economy into outright contraction. And if the US
(still the world’s largest economy) starts to sneeze again, the rest of
the world – its immunity already weakened by Europe’s malaise and
emerging countries’ slowdown – will catch pneumonia.
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