U.S. Overview

The Recovery Will Take Time to Build Momentum

Forecasts for economic growth during the second half of this year and 2010 have been steadily ratcheted up as most of the monthly economic indicators have come in better than expected. We have raised our own estimate modestly. We now see real GDP rising at a 3.7 percent annual rate, which is 0.3 percentage points higher than one month ago. Estimates for real GDP growth during the fourth quarter and 2010 are essentially the same as they were one month ago, and our first look at 2011 calls for real GDP to rise 2.5 percent.

The long string of real GDP gains seems a bit odd coming just as the unemployment rate approaches 10 percent. Much of the near-term improvement comes from a narrowing of the trade deficit and a smaller inventory drawdown. Inventories are “only” expected to decline by $100.0 billion in the current quarter, less than the prior quarter’s $159.2 billion plunge. The smaller decline will add 1.8 percentage points to third-quarter growth and 1.7 percentage points to the fourth-quarter numbers.

There is also some real improvement taking place. Stronger economic growth overseas is boosting demand for exports, helping further narrow the trade deficit. Fiscal stimulus dollars are also flowing a little more freely. Federal government spending is expected to average a 6.0 percent pace for the next three quarters, helping offset continued weakness of state & local government and the private sector.


International Overview

Has the Global Economy Turned the Corner?

Following five consecutive quarters of contraction, it appears that real GDP growth in the euro area is turning positive again. However, there are a few important countries in the Euro-zone in which consumers became highly geared over the past few years. Therefore, growth in the overall euro area could be held back somewhat over the next year or so as these consumers delever. With inflation benign and the sustainability of the recovery still in question, the European Central Bank will likely refrain from tightening policy.

The British economy, which plunged into its deepest recession in decades, is also exhibiting incipient signs of recovery. Like their counterparts in some continental economies, British consumers levered up earlier this decade. Therefore, it seems that a period of consumer retrenchment is in store. In our view, the Bank of England will also be on hold well into next year.

If there is a region of the world where recovery has clearly taken hold already, it would be Asia. China is leading, but most other Asian economies have also posted positive rates of GDP growth, at least on a sequential basis. Asian central banks likely will be the first institutions to hike rates, but policy tightening probably won’t get under way in the region until sometime next year. Inflation is benign in most Asian economies, and the outlook for many western economies, which are important trading partners for the region, remains uncertain.