The trouble of microeconomics is that one can prove things that defies
common sense, such as death is a growth engine for the undertaking industry
and cemetary developers, not to mention its easing effect on social security
payments. Comon sense would suggest that deaths shrinks the economy,
increase inheritance tax revenue and enriches heirs..
Henry C.K. Liu
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ECONOMIC
NEWS UPDATE
IRWIN M. STELZER
15 October
2003
We have always
known that the views of economic forecasters are best taken with a barrel
of salt. Now it turns out that not only don't economists have a clear view
as to where the economy is headed, they can't even tell with any accuracy
where it's been.
In Britain,
analysts were shocked when the Office of National Statistics (ONS) decided
that the economy has been growing twice as fast as it previously thought.
It seems that someone in the until-now merely useless Department of Trade
and Industry had lowered it to downright dangerous by badly misestimating
the level of construction activity. The revision raised from impossible
to probable the prospect that the Treasury's prediction that the nation's
finances would come right would prove spot on, rather than miserably off
the mark.
In America,
economists are trying to decide not only whether the current 5+% growth
rate is a mere spurt, due to peter out when consumers have finished disposing
of the tax rebates they have been getting in the mail, or is the start
of another long-term period of above-trend growth. Some, like economists
at Goldman Sachs, see danger ahead: "Conditions are ripe for setbacks in
homebuilding and consumer purchases of durable goods?. Mortgage loan refinancing,
one of two key drivers, has already plunged; the tax cut - the other driver
- is having its biggest impact ? in the third quarter?".
Adding to the
gloom are declines in the index of the Institute of Supply Management and
various indices of consumer confidence, the refusal of China to allow its
currency to rise against the dollar so as to increase the competitiveness
of American-made exports, and OPEC's decision to cut back on oil production
so as to shore up prices.
Enter the optimists.
The Institute of Supply Management's index, they point out, may have dropped
a bit, but is still above 50, the level that indicates that the manufacturing
sector is expanding. Consumers may not be in a chipper mood, but they continue
to spend: the latest figures indicate a powerful 7.4% increase in consumer
spending during the early part of the just-ended quarter, a year-on-year
rise of 13% and 5.8%, respectively, in the number of vehicles sold by General
Motors and Ford in September, a mini-boom at the nation's (indeed, the
world's) largest retailer, Wal-Mart, and continued strength in the housing
market. Better still, business spending recorded a second quarter gain
of 7.3%, the biggest rise in three years, and likely to be sustained if
reports that America's corporations are raking in the highest profits in
several years prove accurate.
Add these two
anecdotes. At dinner last week one of America's premiere dealmakers told
me that there is so much buying power available to finance acquisitions,
that a new wave of corporate takeovers is about to break upon us, to the
joy of the investment banking and legal communities. And a few days ago,
in the course of reviewing the state of the economy with a leading investment
advisor, I learned that those close to the market, as she is, just don't
believe their own economists' predictions of slackening growth. "We are
in the midst of a worldwide economic recovery", this normally conservative
advisor, responsible for billions of dollars of clients' money, told me.
She has chosen to ignore the readings of her own economists, just as she
shunned the advice of her irrationally exuberant colleagues during the
booming 90s.
It was ever
thus - the economic tea leaves readable only through a glass, darkly. But
now economists are admitting that not only are we uncertain about the future,
we are not sure we know much about the recent past.
Consider the
most politically sensitive of all US economic statistics: the employment
and unemployment rates. Professor Alan Krueger of Princeton University
asks his readers to pick one of the following: "The jobless rate dropped
in August; it didn't; we don't know." Writing in The New York Times, Krueger
points out that the reported decline from 6.18% to 6.08% might be due to
the error inherent in the sampling procedure used by the Bureau of labor
Statistics in its sample survey of 60,000 households. So the correct answer
to the good professor's quiz is "we don't know".
There are even
bigger problems with job market data. Many economists look at the lay-off
announcements of major manufacturers and conclude that the job market is
somewhere between shrinking and soft. Not so, says Professor Allan Meltzer,
of Carnegie Mellon University. When a manufacturing firm outsources, say,
its cafeteria operation, it reports a decline in employment. The start-up
that inherits that function continues to employ the same workers, buts
its job total is not included in the government's so-called Establishment
Survey, which covers employers of about one-third of all workers. As Jon
Hilsenrath points out in a recent Wall Street Journal comment, "In the
past, the survey has underestimated employment in the early stages of upturns
because it missed the jobs being created by very young companies." Indeed,
a study by John Kitchen, an economist with the House Budget Committee,
found that in the first 20 months of the five previous economic recoveries,
the government has had to revise up its early estimates of the total number
of jobs.
We are not talking
about small differences. Meltzer notes that for the year ending in August
the Establishment Survey shows a loss of 463,000 jobs, while the Household
Survey shows that the economy added 313,000 jobs. More important to the
White House, the 2.7 million lost jobs reported by the Establishment Survey
and used by Democrats to attack the Bush economic record, shrinks to 220,000
jobs lost in the Household Survey.
Unfortunately,
major data revisions are unavoidable. So when you sup with an economist
trumpeting the latest, the very latest information, use a long spoon.
A version
of this Update appeared in The Sunday Times (London)