U.S. Overview
Yes We Can Recover!
We continue to believe the fourth quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 will mark the darkest hours of this recession. Output, employment and consumer spending will likely remain under pressure for all of this year and possibly into the early part of next year. The recession will eventually end and we see the bottom occurring in either the fourth quarter of 2009 or first quarter of 2010. The end of the recession, however, will not mark the end of the economy’s struggles. The unemployment rate is expected to rise throughout 2010, peaking at 10 percent or more.
Our outlook includes the impact of the recently enacted economic stimulus act. Reductions in payroll withholding will provide some modest support to personal and after–tax income in April and May, which will help moderate recent declines in consumer spending. Business fixed investment and commercial construction are expected to be somewhat weaker than our earlier forecast, reflecting the recent sharp downturn in factory orders and business confidence. Government spending has also been revised slightly higher, particularly during the second half of this year.
Slower economic growth around the world is cutting into exports and we now expect international trade to subtract 0.6 percentage points from 2009 economic growth. The large downward revision to fourth quarter real GDP also lowered the growth trend, and we now expect real GDP in 2009 will contract 3.3 percent.
International Overview
Foreign Central Banks Join Fed in Unorthodox Steps
At recent policy meetings, the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank each cut their respective policy rates by 50 basis points. Central banks in Canada and Great Britain have cut policy rates about as low as they can go. However, foreign central banks are not out of ammunition. For example, the Bank of England announced a program of asset purchases, including purchases of government bonds, which led to a significant rally in the U.K. government bond market. Lower government bond yields should help to pull private sector borrowing costs lower as well. The Bank of Canada said that it will announce a framework for unconventional policy measures in April. The ECB likely will cut its policy rate further, and it too could eventually embark upon a course of unconventional easing.
On a trade-weighted basis, the U.S. dollar has risen about 20 percent against other major currencies since last July. In our view, the dollar’s rally has further to run because signs of economic stabilization should appear in the United States before they do in most other major economies. However, as foreign economies stop contracting later this year and early next year, most foreign currencies should stabilize as well. The currencies of many developing countries should eventually stabilize and begin to strengthen as shell-shocked investors become less risk averse and become attracted to the high returns that emerging markets currently offer.







