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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
December 14,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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November Retail Sales Register a Decent
Advance
Not Enough to Power Robust Growth
Today, the Commerce Department
reported retail sales in November
increased 1 percent from October, and
retail sales, less automobiles and
parts, were up 1.1 percent.
November sales gains should be viewed
along side the 0.1 and 0.3 percent
contractions in October spending on all
retail items and those excluding
automotive products.
Compared to a year ago, November
retail sales were up 5.6 percent, and
excluding automobiles and parts, retail
sales increased 5.3 percent.
Overall, these are decent but modest
gains. Retail sales are advancing at a
bit less than 0.5 percent a month, and
this is not enough to power robust
economic growth.
Sales of upscale items remain strong.
These are powered by recent stock market
gains and strong employment and pay
increases for professionals and managers
well positioned to benefit from
globalization, for example in investment
banking, law, top levels of corporate
management, and accounting.
Sales at many mid-scale retailers are
registering only modest gains over last
year. Household incomes are still rising
but consumer caution reflects the impact
of the flagging housing market and
layoffs in manufacturing and new home
construction. Middle class white collar
and blue collar workers continue to
spend but with a more cautious eye.
Gasoline, House and Stock Prices
In November, the average retail price
of gasoline was down 1.8 cents per
gallon percent, or less than 1 percent.
Coupled with falling prices in September
and October, this stability in gas
prices helped move up sales of
nonessential items such as building
materials for home improvements and
sporting goods, hobby and music store
sales.
Although housing market has softened
since the summer, house prices are still
up about 55 percent over the last five
years. While homeowners may not expect
much appreciation over the next twelve
months and values will fall in some
cities and communities, homeowners still
have a lot of untapped equity to finance
additional spending. The reservoir of
wealth created by the housing boom has
not evaporated and is only partially
spent.
Stock prices have risen about 12
percent since August, and this has more
than compensated for falling home
equities on household balance sheets.
The outlook for stock prices remains
good, as profits continue to grow,
especially among firms with significant
overseas operations.
Lower gas prices, the realization
that housing prices are not collapsing,
and a buoyant stock market should keep
consumers spending in 2007, albeit
growing at a more moderate pace than in
recent years.
Retail sales should advance at a
modest 5 percent pace in 2007.
Outlook for Growth
Home builders have lots of inventory
to work off, buyer caution is slowing
this process, and housing construction
will not recover significantly until mid
2007.
Commercial construction and business
investment have been more buoyant
lately; however, better performance from
these components of business investment
will not be enough to offset the drag on
economy from fewer housing starts.
The only real opportunity to spur
growth will be through a lower trade
deficit, which continues to drag down
the economy. The dollar has weakened but
mostly against the euro and the
currencies of other industrialized
currencies, where exchange rate
movements have modest consequences for
patterns of U.S. imports.
Against the important Chinese yuan,
the dollar has not moved much and
remains too high. The yuan sets the
pattern for other Asian and developing
country currencies, which are critical
to reducing the trade deficit. Unless
Secretary Henry Paulson finds a way to
succeed in talks with China, in a way
his predecessor John Snow could not,
Americans can expect the trade to weigh
down growth and a deteriorating job
market.
Confident talk from the Federal
Reserve that economy is on a solid
footing more reflects the Feds
preoccupation with inflation than the
economic fundamentals.
Growth will be sub par, in the range
of 2.5 percent or less, without
significant measures to reduce the trade
deficit or lower interest rates.
Slow growth results not from the
fundamental physics of the economy but
from conscious policy choices at
Treasury and the Federal Reserve.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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