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The U.S. Economy


Quick Links: Economics Guide
 
U.S. EconomyThe Beige Book: Signs of Recovery

"Reports from the twelve Federal Reserve districts indicate that the economy continued to improve in July and August. Eleven districts say that activity levels increased during the summer. In some districts, improvement occurred in selected sectors, and in others, it was broad-based. Even in the Dallas district, where activity remains generally weak, contacts are said to be more optimistic.

"Consumer activity showed improvement in most districts. But Kansas City, Philadelphia, and Boston noted that the increases in retail sales were slight or modest, and New York indicated retail results were better in July than August (partly on account of the August blackout). And retail sales were weak or softening according to respondents in the Cleveland and St. Louis districts.

"Ten districts report increases in manufacturing activity. The exceptions were Dallas, where there was little change, and Richmond, which reports that manufacturing weakened. District reports on nonfinancial services firms--temp agencies, software and IT companies, or trucking and shipping--mostly indicate activity increased during the summer months. Among districts reporting on bank lending, a majority cite increases. Most districts report strong housing markets and weak commercial real estate markets, with the latter showing scattered signs of improvement.

"Business reports from the New York, Cleveland, Atlanta, Chicago, and Dallas districts mention the mid-August blackout. While respondents note a comprehensive assessment is premature in this round of information-gathering, the effects were generally small. Even where firms were closed for several days, affected contacts suggest they are not anticipating difficulties in making up for lost production or shipments. "

[Source: The Beige Book. Federal Reserve Board. September 3, 2002.]

Key Websites

 

 


The Recession Recovery

Wall Street Journal reporter Jon E. Hilsenrath describes the puzzling and alarming nature of the current recovery, characterized by slow growth in GDP and income accompanied by continuing job losses in manufacturing and many other industries:
[WSJ Online  5/29/03 p. 1, c.5. In The Wall Street Journal UF+ & Factiva UF+]

Economist Robert Hall has been puzzling over a thorny question for nearly a year: What do you call an economy that has started expanding again but keeps destroying jobs?

Mr. Hall heads a committee at the National Bureau of Economic Research, an academic group in Cambridge, Mass., that declares when U.S. recessions begin and end. In May of last year, Mr. Hall and his colleagues believed the latest recession might be over. Consumers were spending more and economic output was rising. All that the committee members needed to see was a few months of uninterrupted job growth to announce the end of the recession. "It seemed like the timing was imminent," he says.

But Mr. Hall is still waiting. Instead of expanding employment, companies are continuing to shed jobs at a furious pace -- 525,000 nonfarm payroll positions in the past three months alone. Since March 2001, when the recession began, the U.S. economy has lost 2.1 million jobs. The total number of people unemployed -- including discouraged workers who would prefer to work but have stopped looking -- is about 9.2 million. And the number of people who are working part time because they can't find full-time work is 4.8 million, up 46% since 2001, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In short, the U.S. is experiencing the most protracted job-market downturn since the Great Depression. It has left behind a remarkably broad swath of workers -- from young to old, and from high-school dropouts to the highly educated -- even as the economy has started growing again.

Why is this happening? The labor market is in the midst of structural change, with numerous industries, from manufacturers to brokerage firms and airlines to hotels, adjusting to a new economic order after the boom of the late 1990s. Intensifying competition from abroad, slow growth at home and a relentless push for productivity are driving this change. What has surprised economists is not so much how harsh the adjustment has been -- after all, the unemployment rate remains relatively low at 6% -- but how long it is taking to play out and how broadbased it has become.

Erica Groshen, a labor economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, recently studied employment trends in 70 industries over the past 30 years. She found that the structural change is vast. "Before in a recession you had a lot of companies giving people temporary layoffs, saying, 'We'll call you back when we need you,' " she says. "That is not what firms do anymore."

During recessions in the 1970s and 1980s, about half of all jobs were in industries that tended to go through cyclical swings, Ms. Groshen says -- meaning laid-off workers would be called back. The other half experienced structural changes -- meaning jobs that were eliminated were never meant to come back. Ms. Groshen says this started to change in the 1990 recession and has intensified in this downturn. Today, she says, 75% of jobs are in industries going through structural change.

Payrolls in the electronics sector, and for producers of industrial equipment, have declined for 28 straight months. In communications, payrolls have fallen for 24 months. In the securities and airline industries, they have fallen in 16 of the past 24 months... (Wall Street Journal Online [Subscription Required]).

[Source: "Why For Many This Recovery Feels More Like a Recession." By Jon E. Hilsenrath. The Wall Street Journal p. A1, C5. May 29, 2003. In The Wall Street Journal UF+ & Factiva UF+]


Economy Remains "Lackluster"

"WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. economy remained ``lackluster'' in March and early April as the war in Iraq dampened consumer spending and a mysterious Asian virus cut into international airline travel, the Federal Reserve reported Wednesday.

"The central bank's latest nationwide survey of business conditions depicted an economy still struggling to emerge from a pronounced slowdown that began late last year.

"The Fed said there had been only scattered signs of improvement with most of its regions reporting that ``the pace of economic activity continued to be lackluster during March and the first two weeks of April.''

"The survey, known as the ``Beige Book'' for the color of its cover, will be used by policymakers when they next meet to set interest rates on May 6. Analysts say if the economy shows no further pick-up by that time, there is a strong likelihood that the central bank will trim interest rates again."

[Source: New York Times on the Web. April 23, 2003]


Fed Likely To Ease Again

"In retrospect, the fed's action at the August 13 FOMC meeting was masterful. By keeping rates steady but adopting an easing bias, the Fed engineered a sharp decline in long-term rates, with the 10-year Treasury at the lowest yield in 39 years, without doing the equity market any lasting harm. Because the Fed lowered the bar for further easing, we now look for the Fed to follow through with a 25 basis point cut in the funds rate to 1.5% at the September 24 FOMC. But that is no sure thing, and is dependent on financial conditions and forthcoming economic data."

[Source: Weekly Economic & Financial Commentary. By Bruce Steinberg, Chief Economist. Merrill Lynch. August 16, 2002]


The W Scenario

"Celebrating victory well in advance seems to be the style lately. And that includes the economic front. Both the administration and many business leaders have taken a modest improvement in economic indicators as proof that the economy is poised for full recovery. They could be right - but don't count on it.

"The good news to date consists mainly of evidence not that things are getting better but that they are getting worse more slowly. New claims for unemployment insurance have fallen; that means fewer people are being laid off, but not that laid-off workers are finding new jobs. Industrial production has stabilized; that means that companies have worked off the excess inventory that led them to slash production in 2001, but not that demand for their products has increased.

"We won't have a serious recovery until what economists call 'final demand' shows substantial increases, and workers start being rehired. Where will that recovery come from?"

[Source: "The W Scenario." By Paul Krugman. The New York Times February 22, 2002 Section A; p.25, col.1. In Lexis-Nexis.]


The Federal Reserve's Beige Book

"District reports suggest that the economy expanded modestly in recent weeks, with an uneven performance across sectors. Boston, New York, Atlanta, and Dallas noted some tapering off in economic growth, while Cleveland and St. Louis indicated some improvement. Reports from the rest of the Districts point to continued moderate growth. Overall, prices of finished goods and services remained stable, though there were scattered reports of price pressures.

"Retail sales were mixed, with four Districts indicating some weakening, but five reporting a pickup, partly weather-related. Retail inventories were said to be in good shape, and many retailers expressed optimism about the near-term sales outlook. Vehicle sales were seen as weak in June but were boosted by incentive programs in early July. Manufacturing activity, though mixed across Districts and industries, appears to have improved, on balance.

"Residential real estate and construction activity was widely described as strong, though some softness was reported in the rental segment. In contrast, commercial real estate was almost universally described as weak, though stable in some cases. Travel and tourism activity was reported to be little changed overall, with the Western Districts tending to fare somewhat better than those on the East Coast. Reports from other service industries mostly pointed to stable activity. Banks reported strong demand for residential mortgages, steady demand for consumer loans, and weak, but in some cases improving, demand for commercial loans. Credit quality was still described as good, with no significant increases reported in delinquency rates. Agricultural conditions were described as poor in a number of Districts.

"Labor markets were characterized as slack but relatively stable in most Districts; New York and Kansas City indicated some softening, but Richmond noted modest improvement. The pace of wage increases generally remained subdued, but many Districts noted continued escalation of non-wage benefit costs, most notably health insurance. Prices of raw materials were generally stable, though prices of steel, plastics, and lumber have risen noticeably. Prices of finished goods and services were generally flat."

[Source: The Beige Book. July 31, 2002. The Federal Reserve Board.]


Commentary from the Economist Intelligence Unit

"Earlier this year most economists had expected the Fed to raise interest rates during 2002. Now many predict that rates will be cut before the year is out. In the past few weeks the recovery has started to look shaky. For a start, GDP growth in the second quarter slowed to only 1.1% at an annual rate. In July, the purchasing managers' indices of activity in both manufacturing and services fell sharply; total hours worked also declined. Retail sales rose by a robust 1.2% in July, yet this was due mainly to car firms offering interest-free loans. Not counting cars and petrol, retail sales were flat. Ominously, consumer confidence fell sharply."

"The slide in confidence partly reflects the slump in equities. Share prices have picked up a little from their late-July lows, yet America's stockmarket is still worth about $7 trillion less than at its peak in early 2000. The loss has partly been offset by a rise in house prices, but the latest figures suggest that the housing market may now be cooling. For the third year in a row, households are likely to see their net wealth shrink. Savings rates are still historically low, so unless share prices rebound, households will probably have to start saving more and spending less."

[Source: The Economist. Economist Intelligence Unit. August 23, 2002. EIU Viewswire.]


Profile of the US Economy

"The US has one of the most advanced economies in the world, and leads the way in the information technology revolution and in many other areas of technical innovation. Its manufacturing base accounted for 16% of GDP in 1999, while its agricultural sector is very small but also very productive. (See Reference table 10 for the sectoral breakdown of GDP.) The US is by far the world's leading economic power. Its GDP totalled almost US$10trn in 2000; assuming international purchasing power parity, this was three times the size of Japan's output, almost five times the size of Germany's and more than seven times the size of the UK's. Although the volume of its exports and imports exceeds that of any other country, the value of the US's external sector as a percentage of its GDP is comparatively low. Exports of goods and services accounted for less than 11% of GDP in 2000.

"The US has an exceptionally diverse economy and is self-sufficient in most raw materials. Leading industries include steel, motor vehicles, aerospace, telecommunications, chemicals, electronics and computers. During the 1970s and early 1980s many of the leading industrial sectors were thought to be in decline, largely because of the proliferation of superior production techniques in East Asia. The US auto and steel sectors were particularly hard hit during that period. In the 1990s, however, these traditional manufacturing sectors showed adaptability and largely recovered by embracing new technology and increasing labour productivity.

"Services, widely defined, accounted for over 80% of GDP in 1999, with distributive trades, real estate, transport, finance, healthcare and business services being the most important. The impact of new technology has also been felt in the services sector, especially in the delivery of many services over the Internet."

[Source: "Economy: Economic Structure." Country Profile: United States. Economist Intelligence Unit. 2000. In EIU.com.]


Business Cycles, Economic Growth and Growth Cycles

"Business cycles are the recurring rises and falls in the overall economy as reflected in production, employment, profits, and prices. They are associated with capitalistic societies in which production, employment, prices, wages, and interest rates are largely determined in the marketplace. They are primarily associated with industrially advanced nations that have highly developed business and financial structures, in contrast to developing nations that have a large agricultural component that is subject to the vagaries of weather and the consequent abundant or poor harvests. Business cycles reflect the inability of the marketplace to accommodate smoothly such factors as new technologies, shifting markets for new and substitute products, uncertainties and risks in business investments, intensified worldwide competition, and shortages and gluts created by wars, weather-dependent harvests, and cartels."

[Source: Tracking America's Economy. By Norman Fumkin. 3rd ed. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, Inc. 1998. p. 3. In netLibrary.]


Peter Z. McKay, Business Librarian. University of Florida.
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