U.S. Overview

Recovery is in the Mind of the Beholder

We continue to expect the economic recovery to start late this year. Yet we see the recovery as being different in both character (less diversified) and strength (weaker) relative to past recoveries. Therefore, we believe the recovery will be disappointing to both citizens and policymakers. Such disappointment means more difficult decisions in the next three years.

Economics is the science of choices and tradeoffs. Our outlook suggests that the recovery in output, employment and consumer incomes will be sub par, which means consumer and government spending will not return to what many would perceive as normal for an economic recovery. For example, consumer spending is expected to be down 0.7 percent in 2009 and only rise 1.2 percent in 2010. This is below the average of 2.9 percent during the 2004-2007 period. We estimate just 740,000 housing units will be started in 2010; the average during the 2003-2005 bubble period was 1.95M units. Unemployment is estimated to reach nearly 11 percent compared to about five percent during the 2004-2006 period. Historically, large budget deficits will persist, and decision-makers in both the private and public sectors will have to make hard choices on scarce resources. There is an ongoing economic adjustment to a new, lower equilibrium long-run growth rate for retail, construction, manufacturing (particularly durable goods) and financial services. This adjustment is most evident in the large, broad-based declines in recent employment data.

International Overview

Are Foreign Economies Bottoming Yet?

Most economies experienced deep contractions in the fourth quarter, but there have been some glimmers of hope recently. The Chinese manufacturing PMI recently crossed the demarcation line that separates contraction from expansion, and “hard” data in some countries show that industrial production has risen recently. However, it would be premature to claim that the global economy is “stabilizing,” which implies that activity has bottomed. Rather, it probably would be more accurate to say that an inflection point, in which activity is still declining but less rapidly than before, may have been reached. Recovery is not here yet, but recent developments are somewhat encouraging. Indeed, “a journey of one thousand miles begins with a single step.”

We believe the greenback will trend modestly higher between now and the end of 2009. U.S. policymakers have arguably done more to stimulate the economy than their counterparts in many foreign countries. The United States should show signs of exiting its deep recession before most other major economies do, and expectations of better days ahead should be positive for the greenback. However, the dollar’s rise likely will run out of steam later this year as the sluggish U.S. economic recovery that we forecast keeps rates of return on dollar assets relatively low. Moreover, strong foreign purchases of U.S. Treasury securities, which helped to boost the greenback last year, should wane as risk aversion becomes less extreme.