Executive Summary

As recently as the first half of 2008, businesses were still spending and making a positive contribution to real GDP. But with the onset of the credit crisis orders weakened significantly in the middle of last year and the declines accelerated in the wake of the credit crisis, resulting in four consecutive quarters of contraction in business fixed investment (Figure 1).

Businesses across the country slashed investment spending in an effort to survive the recession. Many businesses—particularly manufacturers—held out hope that global growth, combined with a weak dollar might save the day. Unfortunately, the global economy slipped into recession; with inventories continuing to climb while businesses cut production and investment back even more (Figure 2).

The hope died quickly when it became clear that global economic growth was completely falling apart in the fourth quarter of 2008 and as a result, orders disappeared and inventories rose. Orders fell off a cliff going into 2009 as corporate belt-tightening went global. Recently various purchasing managers’ indexes have offered evidence that business is dipping its toe back into the waters of business investment, and nondefense capital goods orders ex-aircraft—an important indicator of business investment—are showing signs of life. To what extent will business investment spending recover? Will it be a sustainable recovery? How will it compare to past economic recoveries?