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The Outlook for the U.S. and Global Economies

The Outlook for the U.S. and Global Economies. Dan North Euler Hermes Chief Economist, North America. MAY 2012. The Outlook May, 2012 Overall Cautious Optimism Risks Debt uncertainty in Europe/U.S. A positive, but weak U.S. economy Forces and measures Government responses Conclusions.

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The Outlook for the U.S. and Global Economies

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  1. The Outlook for the U.S. and Global Economies Dan North Euler Hermes Chief Economist, North America MAY 2012

  2. The Outlook May, 2012 • Overall Cautious Optimism • Risks • Debt uncertainty in Europe/U.S. • A positive, but weak U.S. economy • Forces and measures • Government responses • Conclusions ntshl

  3. World growth should fall from 3.0% in 2011 to +2.7% for 2012, with emerging economies leading the way (Asia ex-Japan, China, India, Latin America). In the US, growth should be around 2% for 2012. Recession in the Euro zone which will be severe for several economies. Risk of disorderly default or exit from the EMU is rising. The Economic Outlook for 2012 in a nutshell Eur dbt

  4. European Debt Crisis Uncertainty • This started over 2 yrs ago. Europe is burning while its leaders fiddle. • What happens whenGreece defaults again? • What happens ifItaly, Spain, France need bailouts? • Latest plan: fiscal unity + ECB printing €’s. Had fiscal targets before – ignored. • Will also need European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF) 500B €, IMF, EU. China? U.S. Fed / taxpayer? • 7 changes in government • 9 downgrades • Dozens of meetings • 17 countries, heads of state, finance ministers, central banks, commercial banks, ECB/IMF/EU. • It’s visibility goes up and down • Problem is UNCERTAINTY! Afct us

  5. European Debt Crisis Uncertainty • How Does It Affect Us? • Exports to Europe • <2% of our GDP • Financial contagion • Possibility that our banks are exposed to losses in Europe - all debt markets are eventually linked • Confidence • Fear slows consumers • Financial markets weaken • None of the three by themselves that much, but all three together could be a significant drag US dbt

  6. U.S. Debt Uncertainty • U.S. debt problem is different. In contrast to Europe, U.S. will never have to default because it can do what no one else can – print U.S. dollars. • U.S. problem is government has no plan to reduce debt that’s so high it hurts the economy. • Deficits continue and debt/GDP at 100% for next 10 years. No attempt to reform entitlements. • Congress is stuck…fiscal cliff, debt ceiling, 2012 elections…uncertainty • Uncertainty over taxes, regulation hurting growth. • But that’s just one aspect of the economy, let’s look at the details…

  7. The four forces which started and ended the recession can help forecast the outlook: • Oil • Housing • Fed policies • Fear • (GDP: $15T, 3.3% ave. growth. It’s the “size” of the economy. Use it to measure the “size” of other big numbers like budget deficit/debt)

  8. Recent oil

  9. gas

  10. Gasoline prices more closely related to Brent – not enough pipeline to get glut of WTI to refineries fast enough gas

  11. hsng

  12. Housing fndmntl

  13. Housing Yld crv

  14. Yld crv

  15. Yld crv

  16. Yld crv

  17. lendng

  18. Banks are lending, fear receding recap

  19. Recap • Four forces caused/ended recession • Oil has been a drag, now improving • Housing flat • Yield curve positive but falling • Lending good • So what do the measures of the economy say?

  20. GDP recovering

  21. Consumption: income fuels spending mfr

  22. Manufacturing strong cntnrs

  23. Two last measures, Bankruptcies brpt

  24. But perception of risk still very high: emply

  25. 4 yrs later, less than half recovered recp

  26. Recap • Four forces caused/ended recession • Oil has been a drag but improving • Housing flat • Yield curve positive but falling • Lending good • GDP, consumer weak, manufacturing good • Employment alarming • To fix it, the government is causing two big problems: • Debt & Potential Inflation fisc

  27. FISCAL POLICY Congress, Administration Spending, taxing, borrowing deficits/debt, budgets… math

  28. Budget Math in Washington • Year 1: spent $80 • Original budget for year 2: spend $110 • Final budget for year 2: spend $90 • In Washington, even though they’re spending $10 more in year 2,this is what they call a $20 “cut”. • Both sides do this defs

  29. Spending, Deficits and Debt Gov’t spends $10 Gov’t gets tax revenue $6 Deficit $4 Treas. gets loan, issues $4 notes/bonds How big is $4T? Don’t know - measure against size of the economy - GDP debt

  30. Accumulated deficits become debt…

  31. Accumulated deficits become debt… Debt>90% = -1% GDP Def red com

  32. The Simpson - Bowles Deficit Reduction Commission finally said it out loud: • We must touch the “third rails” of • Social Security • Medicare • If we don’t we will never be able to balance the budget - entitlements will become the entire budget • The rest is whistling past the graveyard…

  33. Outlays, 2010 Budget, $3.5T

  34. Outlays, 2010 Budget, $3.5T entltmnts

  35. Entitlements Entitlement spending, particularly Medicare or some other form of national healthcare, will be one of the two most contentious and important social, political and economic issue for several generations, the other being energy (ex war). One generation will not be getting the benefits they think are owed them and another generation will be taxed to exhaustion to try to provide them. But it is not hopeless nor doomsday because the math is simple, but right now politicians seem to be incapable of mustering the political will to fix it. isunce

  36. isunce

  37. FYI, this week alone, the Treasury is indebting you and your kids for: $30B 4 wk. bills $30B 3 mo. bills $27B 6 mo. bills $35B 2 yr. notes $35B 5 yr. notes $29B 7 yr. notes Fisc rev

  38. Fiscal Policy Review • We need CLARITY, CERTAINTY, a plan, instead we have: • No 2011 budget, no 2012 budget • 2013 Admin. budget DOA – more debt and deficit • 2013 Republican budget DOA • Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA) and its Super Committee did nothing to reduce debt, did nothing to reform Medicare and Social Security • Four administration deficit reduction plans 2011 • Many others from Congress, Commissions, candidates • Borrowing more every day… stuck

  39. FISCAL POLICY REVIEW • Congress stuck - What now? • Things could change at: • 2012 Fiscal cliff (expiration of Bush and payroll tax cuts, some jobless benefits, sequestration, ceiling?) • 2012 elections • 2024 Medicare goes insolvent • 2050 Social Security goes insolvent • Do note that this is the current situation – it can change mon

  40. MONETARY POLICY The Federal Reserve Bank, Ben Bernanke

  41. Yld crv

  42. txt

  43. MONETARY POLICY • Lowering the short term Fed Funds interest rate usually works

  44. MONETARY POLICY • Lowering the short term Fed Funds interest rate usually works • But this time needed an extra boost, lowering long term interest rates. • Quantitative easing: • Fed prints new $ bills • Buys Treasury bonds in open market • Raises bond prices, lowering interest rates (they move in opposite directions) • Puts $ into financial system • And creates inflationary pressures… QE3? Bal sht

  45. Quantitative Easing (QE) 10 yr work

  46. Did QE2 work?

  47. Did QE2 work?

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