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U.S. Economy Developments and OutlookMarch 4, 2011
Outline of my talk today			Current state of the economy
Output growth:  decent overall; encouraging details
Labor market:  slowly recovering, ways to go
Inflation:  remains low despite rising commodity prices
Where is the economy heading in 2011?
Recent forecasts have improved
Incoming data:   mixed signals
Some upside and downside risks
Normal business cycle dynamics
Oil prices
Fiscal drag 2
3WHERE IS THE ECONOMY CURRENTLY?
GDP Growth:  Solid but not spectacular GDP has grown six straight quarters; 2.8 percent revised growth rate for Q4
Q4-over-Q4 growth rate for 2010 was 2.7 percent—a bit higher than long-run potential GDP growth, but not much
Recovery comparable to two most recent recessions, but lags recovery from previous deep recessions of 1975, 1982.4
Breaking GDP into its componentsEcon 101:   Y = C + I + G + NX
Can break level of GDP up into its component parts: consumption, investment, government and net exports
Can do the same thing for GDP growth rate—can break it into parts due to growth of each component
Rule of thumb:  component’s contribution to GDP growth equals 		(Growth rate of component) * (Component’s share of GDP)For example:  consumption spending is about 70 percent of the economy

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Us econ ppt lynchburg 3-4-2011 final_dr.shea

  • 1. U.S. Economy Developments and OutlookMarch 4, 2011
  • 2. Outline of my talk today Current state of the economy
  • 3. Output growth: decent overall; encouraging details
  • 4. Labor market: slowly recovering, ways to go
  • 5. Inflation: remains low despite rising commodity prices
  • 6. Where is the economy heading in 2011?
  • 8. Incoming data: mixed signals
  • 9. Some upside and downside risks
  • 13. 3WHERE IS THE ECONOMY CURRENTLY?
  • 14. GDP Growth: Solid but not spectacular GDP has grown six straight quarters; 2.8 percent revised growth rate for Q4
  • 15. Q4-over-Q4 growth rate for 2010 was 2.7 percent—a bit higher than long-run potential GDP growth, but not much
  • 16. Recovery comparable to two most recent recessions, but lags recovery from previous deep recessions of 1975, 1982.4
  • 17. Breaking GDP into its componentsEcon 101: Y = C + I + G + NX
  • 18. Can break level of GDP up into its component parts: consumption, investment, government and net exports
  • 19. Can do the same thing for GDP growth rate—can break it into parts due to growth of each component
  • 20. Rule of thumb: component’s contribution to GDP growth equals (Growth rate of component) * (Component’s share of GDP)For example: consumption spending is about 70 percent of the economy
  • 21. Therefore, consumption’s contribution to GDP growth is about (0.7) * (Growth rate of consumption spending)In 2010Q4, consumption grew at 4.1 percent; it’s contribution to GDP was 2.88 percentage points 5
  • 22. Looking under the hood of GDPHandoff of recovery from inventories to sustainable final demand
  • 23. Consumption accelerated sharply in Q4, led by almost 30 percent annualized growth in auto sales
  • 24. Equipment and software slows down a little in Q4 but remains solid
  • 25. Residential and nonresidential construction have not joined party
  • 26. Net exports extremely volatile quarter to quarter—partly measurement problems with oil imports, but exports grew 8.5 percent annualized in Q46
  • 27. Labor market: slowly moving in the right directionPrivate sector jobs have grown 11 straight months; over 1.3 million private jobs added over that span.
  • 28. Will get new jobs report on Friday morning
  • 29. However, we still have over 7 million fewer jobs than we did in December 2007.
  • 30. As with GDP, employment recovery is following contour of the milder 1991 and 2001 recessions, rather than the more severe 1975 and 1982 episodes. 7
  • 31. Labor market: slowly moving in the right directionUnemployment has fallen 0.8 percentage point in the last two months but is still quite elevated at 9 percent
  • 32. Recent decline robust to alternative unemployment indicators
  • 33. Long-term unemployment remains high—could increase long-run “natural rate” of unemployment
  • 34. Okun’s Law: Need GDP to grow 2 percent faster than long-run potential to reduce unemployment rate by 1 percentage point8
  • 35. 9Core inflationstill low despite rising commodity pricesCommodity prices rose over 30 percent in 2nd half of 2010 due to supply shortages, worldwide growth
  • 36. But impact of commodity prices diminishes as goods move up production chain towards retail level, because labor market slack is keeping wages down.
  • 37. Wholesale inflation 0.8 percent in January, 3.6 percent over last 12 months
  • 38. Headline CPI inflation: 0.4% in January, 1.6% over 12 months. Gas prices up 13% over last 12 months.
  • 39. Core CPI inflation (excluding food and energy) 0.2% in January, 1.0% over last 12 months.
  • 40. Inflation expectations have remained stable9
  • 41. 10WHERE IS THE ECONOMY HEADED?
  • 42. Recent forecasts point to accelerating recovery in 201111Analysts have raised their short-term forecasts in recent weeks. Forecasts for 2011 are centered around 3.5 percent. December tax cut deal and surge in consumption, exports in Q4 help explain improved outlook.12Recent Data: some very encouraging signs…Consumer confidence surging
  • 43. Michigan, Conference Board measures now at highest level since early 2008.
  • 44. Institute for Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing growth index highest since May 2004
  • 45. Employment component of ISM highest since 1973; export component highest since 1988
  • 46. Nonmanufacturing ISM out today; January index highest since 2005
  • 47. Unemployment Insurance claims have dropped to lowest levels since July 2008
  • 48. Other data also show drop of inflows into unemployment12
  • 49. Hard data for Q1 not strong so far—but with an asteriskReal Personal Consumption Expenditure dropped 0.1 percent in January; data so far suggests only 1.2 percent annual PCE growth in Q1
  • 50. Core durable goods shipments (excluding defense, aircraft) down 2 percent in January; new core orders down 7 percent.
  • 51. Taken at face value, limited data so far suggests equipment and software spending will fall in Q1
  • 52. Private payrolls up only 50K in January, well below expectations for 150-200K private payroll jobs.
  • 53. February jobs report will be released tomorrow morning
  • 54. How to reconcile weak hard numbers with strong survey evidence?
  • 55. Bad weather in January depressed payrolls, and possibly PCE
  • 56. In recent quarters, durables spending has been weak in first month, grown strongly in 2nd and 3rd month.
  • 57. We look for numbers to bounce back strongly in February.
  • 58. February auto sales jump sharply: over 6 percent in just one month 13
  • 59. Housing: prices are starting to decline againHouse prices trending down in recent months.
  • 60. Case-Shiller/S+P house price index down 2.4 percent in 2010 (December to December); FHFA index down 3.3 percent; CoreLogic down 5.5 percent.
  • 61. Recent forecasts call for continued declines in 2011 and 2012, although at a much slower pace than in 2007-2009.14
  • 62. Housing: too much supply, not enough demandPrices are falling because of adverse supply and demand conditions
  • 63. Home sales have been weak since expiration of home buyer tax credit in April 2010, although they did jump in December
  • 64. Supply is elevated because of overbuilding during mid-1980s, and because of large overhang of distressed properties
  • 65. Mortgage delinquency rates fell sharply in Q4, suggesting that inflows of new homes into distress will slow down.15
  • 66. Impact of housing market on GDP How will weak housing market affect GDP?
  • 67. Direct effect: residential construction will remain low until excess supply worked off.
  • 68. Indirect effect: declining prices could slow down PCE growth by reducing home equity.
  • 69. Fortunately, recent price declines have been mostly concentrated in distressed homes, limiting impact on consumer spending.16
  • 70. 17UPSIDE AND DOWNSIDE RISKS TO THE ECONOMY
  • 71. Upside risk: normal business cycle dynamicsWhile recovery is projected to accelerate in 2011, growth at 3.5 to 4 percent is still below what we might expect from a recovery from a deep recession
  • 72. Following the 1982 recession, real GDP grew 7.7 percent (Q4 over Q4) in 1983, and 5.6 percent in 1984. Following the 1975 recession, economy grew 5.0 percent in 1977 and 6.7 percent in 1978.
  • 73. Typical business cycle dynamics that support rapid growth during a recovery:
  • 74. The virtuous cycle: as businesses create more jobs and expand capacity, consumption and investment demand will accelerate…which will businesses to create more jobs and further expand capacity.
  • 75. Will surge in PCE in Q4 trigger strong hiring in 2011?
  • 76. Durable goods catch-up: should promote sharp acceleration of consumer durables, business equipment and (eventually) residential investment.
  • 77. Consumer durables surged 21 percent in Q4, led by cars.
  • 78. Rising population and household formation will drive housing demand in the long run. 18
  • 79. Downside risk: oil price shock Crude oil up about $10/barrel over past 10 days, to around $100.
  • 80. Gas prices are up about 25 cents to $3.44 per gallon over past 2 weeks.
  • 81. Sustained $10 increase will reduce real GDP about 0.1 percentage point this quarter, about 0.25 ppt after one year.
  • 82. Most of the effect comes through consumption.
  • 83. Gasoline is about 5 percent of typical household’s budget.
  • 84. An 8 percent price increase reduces household resources available for spending on other goods and services by about 0.3 percentage point. 19
  • 85. Downside risk: fiscal drag State and local governments have balanced budgets by cutting spending and raising taxes, creating a drag on GDP
  • 86. Local government has lost 366K jobs since September 2008, and is continuing to decline
  • 87. December tax cut deal prevented federal fiscal drag for 2011, but sharp spending cuts could undo stimulus from December package
  • 88. A $61 billion dollar spending cut concentrated into the last 7 months of FY2011 would reduce aggregate demand by roughly 0.7 percentage point.
  • 89. A one-week shutdown would reduce Q1 GDP by 0.1-0.2 percent, mostly due to lost federal work hours and delayed defense purchases. 20