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Is economic recovery in jeopardy?

Posted May 14 2009, 10:18 AM by Andrew Rosenbaum
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What happened to our economic recovery? Recovery was supposed to be right around the corner, right?

The Federal Reserve and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner keep telling us that things will definitely get better soon -- the Fed says growth should start in the third quarter of this year.

But the most important indicators of that recovery are going in the wrong direction. Retail sales are down. The housing market is stagnant. Mortgage rates have moved higher.

Where are those "green shoots" of recovery that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is always talking about? Have they gone brown?

That phrase about "green shoots" actually comes from Bernanke's March 15 interview on "60 Minutes."

And since that interview, the phrase has been picked up by economists and analysts all over the world. (Try a search on the term and see how many references you get.) 

But today, the green shoots aren't flourishing anymore, and it’s looking like the recovery may genuinely be in danger.

  • Retail sales dropped 0.4% in April, according to a Commerce Department report.  They had been up about 1% in January and in February, and that was one of those green shoots that everyone was talking about.
  • Home foreclosures were up 32% in April from the same month in 2008. This has placed a glut of houses on the market, keeping home prices down. The Case-Shiller Index of housing prices in 20 cities showed an 18.6% drop in February from the same month in the previous year.
  • Consumer sentiment is still close to record lows. The Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index is still 33% below pre-recession levels. "Consumers' expectations for their financial situation are dismal," warned Richard Curtin, the survey's director.
  • Mortgage rates have gone back up over 5%. The number of mortgage applications is decreasing.  

So is a recovery in jeopardy? The outlook is grim, but it’s not without hope. The cost of borrowing money has gone down and banks are trying, although without much success, to lend more.

After the stress tests, fears for the future of the nation's banks have eased. There is little danger of another huge financial disaster sending the stock market through the floor and causing the international credit system to freeze up as it did in 2008.

But we probably shouldn't expect recovery to be just around the bend. There are a few green shoots, but they ain't poppin' out all over. 

You might want to keep an eye out for them after the summer.

Comments

 

Evidently you are not reding the same data I am. Because where I'm reading contradicts everything you said. Mortgae sales are elevated. Retail was level.

Evidently you are not reding the same data I am.  Because where I'm reading contradicts everything you said.  Mortgage sales are elevated.  Retail was level.

The key part of your argument is that "recovery was supposed to be right around the corner...right?" But I have never heard ANYONE in this administration make that claim...in fact, just the opposite, to be patient and persevere. Where are you culling your "facts"...from Glenn Beck?

What economic recovery?

Once Obama succeeded in scaring everyone with gloom and doom scenarios back in January/February, now it seems he and his minions can wave Harry Potter's magic wand and everything will be just fine. Life doesn't work that way, and Obama is not the Messiah who walketh upon water. He got his huge stimulus packages and is in the process of partially-nationalizing key industries, which is what he and his far left buddies wanted. Now he can rhapsodize about things getting better and take credit. What a neophyte.

Truth is that his doom talk made a medium-sized recession worse. Retail sales are flat. While Wal-Mart sales are up most retailer sales are down.

In reality, if Obama (and George Bush before him) hadn't meddled so much in financial institutions we'd be out of this tempest by now. Government intervention nearly always makes matters worse.

At some point Obama is going to have to take ownership of this recession and stop blaming Bush. Obama's goofy and ill-advised policies are ones that have always wrecked the economy everywhere they have been tried, so why should it be any different now?

At some point Obama is going to have to take ownership of this recession and stop blaming Bush. Obama's goofy and ill-advised policies are ones that have always wrecked the economy everywhere they have been tried, so why should it be any different now?

Great time right now to be short selling stocks. (check out the links at http://www.ShortSellingStocks.com ). The market will crash again as the commercial real estate sector falters and as the government bailouts do not sufficiently stimulate the economy.

How impatient can people get?  it's MAY!! he's been in office 5 months and you guys are expecting it to be overnight.  it's not going to happen overnight, it's probably not going to happen this year.  BUT it will happen, I believe it and so do many of his followers.

Maybe there would be a recovery if 700 B had been handed out to the people instead of the banks.  I guess we'll never know how many jobs, houses, or retail sales that would have saved.

Unhappy Guv: You're kidding? I sure hope so. How can anyone blame a president for this mess that has been coming on for eight-plus years? President Obama is trying to fix the mess, and he has only been in office a little over 100 days. You've got a problem other than the economy with President Obama and that is sad; no, it's pathetic.

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