Economic
Outlook 2008: Darkening Clouds
by
Dom Armentano
by Dom Armentano
DIGG THIS
Presidential
election years usually are not recessionary but next year will be
an exception. Several economic factors are colliding in an almost
perfect storm to markedly slow the general economy and the stock
market.
The most important
signal flashing recession is, of course, the sub-prime mortgage
fiasco. After years of monetary inflation on the part of the Federal
Reserve, individuals and families with poor credit were suckered
into low-down-payment/low-interest adjustable mortgages that simply
cannot be maintained or repaid under current conditions. Their incentive
is to sell the property quickly before their equity evaporates and/or
the financial institution repossesses it. Yet the massive oversupply
of homes and condos for sale has pushed prices down at a record
clip and made additional foreclosures even more likely. Next year,
unfortunately, will be the Year of the Auction.
The financial
institutions have also been punished…well sort of. Various institutions
including hedge funds that hold these poorly performing debt obligations
have been forced (by accounting rules) to "write down" the value
of these assets, take huge paper losses in the bargain, and pull
in their financial horns. Thus, any near-term recovery in housing
must now fight a record supply availability, falling prices, higher
insurance costs and restricted credit…a near-term impossibility
in my view.
Moreover, the
slowdown in residential and commercial construction will send secondary
ripple effects throughout the economy. Laid-off construction workers
don't spend money. Construction and home furnishing suppliers sell
less output and make fewer investments. Even local governments will
be pinched by declining property-tax assessments and fewer developer
fees. Things are likely to get worse before they get any better.
The second
major factor indicating a near-term recession is the sky-high price
of crude oil and refined product. Pushed upward by world-wide speculative
Mid-East war fears and increases in demand (especially from China),
increasing energy prices act as an inflationary "tax" on domestic
production and consumption throughout the market economy. Higher
costs of production will lower profits; higher prices will reduce
some consumption. The only good news here is that any substantial
economic slowdown in 2008 will eventually moderate the price of
oil and other commodity prices as well.
The third factor
in the current recession scenario – and the real wild card – is
the continuing decline in the value of the dollar in international
money markets caused by our Iraq blunder and the Federal Reservegenerated
oversupply of dollars. Some economists would argue that a devalued
dollar is good for U.S. exports, and thus positive for the economy
as a whole. I disagree for three reasons.
First, the
bulk of crude oil purchases takes place in dollars; a falling dollar
translates into still higher crude oil prices. Second, the U. S.
dollar is the major reserve currency of the international monetary
system and dollar-paying investments (such as U.S. Treasury bills
and bonds) are held in massive amounts by foreign banks and governments.
Dollar devaluation makes these investments less attractive and any
disinvestment in these areas would sharply drive bond prices down
and increase interest rates.
The third reason
why dollar devaluation makes recession more likely is that it effectively
prevents the Federal Reserve from pushing U.S. interest rates much
lower. Any additional Fed easing (inflation) would be seen as a
signal of even further future dollar devaluation and even higher
dollar prices for oil. Unfortunately, we will not be able to "inflate"
our way out of this recession this time. We will simply have to
take our lumps and let market forces liquidate the bulk of the malinvestments
caused by the unprecedented Greenspan money bubble. This liquidation
process will not be pretty but it is necessary to restore a sustainable
economic recovery in the years ahead.
December
6, 2007
Dom
Armentano [send him mail]
is Professor Emeritus at the University of Hartford (CT) and the
author of Antitrust
and Monopoly
(Independent Institute, 1998) and Antitrust:
The Case for Repeal
(Mises Institute, 1999). He has published articles, op/eds and reviews
in The New
York Times, Wall Street Journal, London Financial Times, Financial
Post, Hartford Courant, National Review, Antitrust Bulletin
and many other journals.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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