Advertisement. Advertise with us

COLUMN

Some Indicators Suggest

Recession Not Looming

By TOM MORGAN • Special to www.AllOTSEGO.com

Are we staring at a recession?

You have surely seen or heard reports, opinion and speculation to that effect. Gloom has been a mini-rage lately.

A few questions are in order. Are economists able to accurately predict recessions? No. If their accuracy percentages were batting averages you would bench them.

Why is the subject of recessions in the air so much lately? The Left salivates at the hint of a recession. Because a recession would inspire voters to kick Trump from office. Thus, critics fill our air waves and opinion columns with gloom and doom.

Entertainer Bill Maher openly dreams of one. NY Times columnist Paul Krugman reckons “Trump Boom to Trump Gloom.” He is anxious to scuttle praise for Trump’s economy. Because he predicted horrible endless worldwide calamity right after Trump’s election. Good economic news embarrasses him.

Can you predict recessions as well as most economists?

Probably. Before you make your prediction, here are a few items to consider.

First, recessions are normal and natural. They are like colds and flu. The longer we go without one, the more likely we are to suffer one. We have gone 10 years without one. That is a record. But our recovery from the last one is one of the weakest ever. Some economists argue that this shows our economy has a lot more room for further expansion.

Next, we can identify two primary causes of recessions over the last eight decades. One is that the Federal Reserve tightened the money supply aggressively. The other is that we had imbalances, bubbles. Such as the big housing bubble before the last recession.

Well, we do not have either cause at the moment. The Fed is loosening, not tightening. And we have no bubbles in sight. (And they are easy to sight.)

Also, we usually have certain conditions BEFORE recessions. We typically have a surging economy. And rising interest rates. And predictions galore that stocks and corporate profits will rise a lot.

Well, we do not have these conditions. Instead, the economy is growing steadily. It is not surging. Interest rates are not rising. And we don’t see a lot of predictions for rocketing stock prices and corporate profits.

In recessions, consumers slow their spending. We are seeing the opposite. According to the government. Most big box retailers tell us their sales and profits are climbing. Walmart is so huge that its figures probably give us a better look at consumer spending than the government’s. And Walmart is pretty happy these days.

It makes sense that consumers spend more these days. And express higher confidence in the economy. After all, we have full employment. We have more job openings than we have unemployed workers. And wages are rising.

Here is a canary in the coal mine for the economy. Weekly unemployment claims. Well, these claims are NOT up. The canary chirps.

Here is a common indicator of good figures ahead: How much businesses are investing in new plant and equipment. That figure is down. But only slightly.

Another canary in the mine is the trend in home-building and buying. Well, building is down. Buying of existing homes is up.

But won’t Trump’s big trade war with China push us into a recession? Maybe, in time. And if we and they open new fronts. But we have not yet imposed many of the tariffs. And we have deferred many others. As for China’s tariffs against our products, they are huge, yes. But the impact on our entire economy is minimal.

Britain’s and Germany’s economies are slowing. And the overall EU economy is not much to write home about. Won’t these slowdowns pull us into recession? Our economy has often moved in the opposite direction of theirs.

Two further items to consider. One is that we might well have suffered a recession by now without our big tax cuts. And without the slashing of regulations. There is a strong argument that they breathed life into our weak recovery from the last recession.

A final item is perception. In the recent past, we had media and political bullhorns convince a majority of Americans that we were in recessions. At times when we were anything but. Given the anti-Trump and left-wing bias of our mainstream media, this is likely the goal of much of our media machine today.

In other words, you will probably hear a lot more gloom and doom from them. The difference this time is that Trump wields a bigger bullhorn than the Bushes did.

Tom Morgan, the retired Oneonta investment counselor who has a syndicated print and radio column, Money Talk, lives in Franklin.

Posted

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Articles

SCOLINOS: It’s All We Need To Know: Home Plate 17 Inches Wide

COLUMN VIEW FROM THE GAME It’s All We Need To Know: Home Plate 17 Inches Wide Editor’s Note:  Tim Mead, incoming Baseball Hall of Fame president, cited John Scolinos, baseball coach at his alma mater, Cal Poly Pomona, as a lifelong inspiration, particularly Scolinos’ famous speech “17 Inches.” Chris Sperry, who published sperrybaseballlife.com, heard Scolinos deliver a version in 1996 at the American Baseball Coaches Association in Nashville, and wrote this reminiscence in 1916 in his “Baseball Thoughts” column. By CHRIS SPERRY • from www.sperrybaseballlife.com In 1996, Coach Scolinos was 78 years old and five years retired from a college coaching…

Piper Seamon Scores 1,000th point

1,000 THANKS! Piper Seamon 5th CCS Girl To Hit High Mark The Cooperstown Central student section erupts as Piper Seamon scores her 1,000th career point in the Hawkeyes’ 57-39 win over Waterville at home last evening. Seamon becomes the fifth girl and only the 14th player in school history overall to score 1,000 points.  Inset at right, Pipershares a hug with teammate Meagan Schuermann after the game was stopped to acknowledge her achievement. Seamon will play basketball next year at Hamilton College. (Cheryl Clough/AllOTSEGO.com)  …

Sports Can Resume, Superintendents Told

CLICK HERE FOR MEMO TO SCHOOLS Sports Can Resume, Superintendents Told COOPERSTOWN – In a memo released Friday evening, county Public Health Director Heidi Bond advised local school superintendents that sports can resume as early as Monday. “Effective Feb. 1, participants in higher-risk sports may participate in individual or distanced group training and organized no/low-contact group training,” Bond wrote, “…including competitions and tournaments, if permitted by local health authorities.”…