|
Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
|
November
27, 2007
|
|
By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
E-MAIL
WEB SITE
|
 |
Avoiding a Recession
Recessions are not inevitable
adjustments built into the clockwork of
a modern economy.
Businesses no longer make products on
long lead times and stumble into excess
inventories of cars and appliances,
triggering layoffs and pauses in
consumer spending. Computer-aided supply
chain management and tracking customer
purchases permit businesses to better
align what they make to what can be
sold.
Recessions still happen, because of
external shocksnatural disasters and
political eventsand errors of judgment
and greed. Sadly, rocketing oil prices
and the credit and housing meltdowns
bear traits of the latter.
Since 2001, the trade deficit has
doubled to more than $700 billion. Oil
and consumer goods from China account
for more than 80 percent of the gap, and
how we finance these purchases has a lot
to do with our current mess.
The Bush Administrations has done
little to encourage serious energy
conservationit wont endorse attainable
improvements in home furnaces and
mileage standards for automobiles.
The Chinese government aggressively
intervenes in foreign exchange
marketsabout $500 billion a yearto keep
the yuan inexpensive and Chinese goods
cheap in U.S. stores. The Bush
Administration refuses to do much about
it.
Every time a manufacturing job leaves
the Middle West for the Middle Kingdom,
oil consumption goes up, as Chinese
farmers move to cities and require more
air conditioning and amenities of urban
life.
The combination of gasoline gluttony
and 11 percent growth in China has sent
oil prices above $100 a barrel.
In 2007 the average price of imported
oil was about $62 a barrel. Next year if
it averages just $77, the increase would
shave $72 billion, or 0.5 percent of
GDP, off U.S. buying power.
To finance imports, Americans borrow
and sell assets to foreigners. Saudi
princes and the Chinese government have
bought chunks of Citigroup, the
Blackstone Group and U.S. bonds.
Consumers access funds through mortgages
and other loans bundled into bonds for
investors.
Banks wrote many reckless adjustable
rate mortgages (ARMs), bundled those
into bonds, and paid Standard and Poors
to assign those securities high ratings.
Common are homeowners, who have
refinanced five times in five years, owe
six times their income, and drive a
Lexus.
Each month, thousands of ARMs are
resetting to higher rates, homeowners
cant make the payments and are
defaulting on loans, banks are taking
big hits on their balance sheets, and
bond and credit markets are in turmoil.
Home prices are falling and credit is
too expensive for worthy homeowners and
sound businesses. Just a five percent
drop in the value of existing homes
translates into $95 billion annually in
lost consumer spending.
Add to that the impacts of oil prices
and tight credit on businesses, and
overall spending could drop $250 billion
or close to 2 percent of GDP. Add the
usual multiplier effectswhen the banker
does not buy bread, the baker doesnt buy
flour, and the farmer gets stuck with
his grainand we could have a recession.
The Federal Reserve and Treasury
Department have been fairly agnostic
about this prospect and should do more
to avert disaster.
Near term, the Federal Reserve should
further lower short-term interest rates
to ensure sound businesses have access
to credit at reasonable terms. As
needed, it should buy 10- and 20-year
Treasury securities to keep down
long-term interest rates.
Treasury should organize, for
immediate action by Congress or through
the private sector, a three-year program
to permit homeowners, who can make
payments, to convert ARMs to fixed-rate
6.5 percent mortgages. That would
require federal guarantees or
subsidizing private insurance, and such
intervention is usually not desirable,
but the economy is in a crisis.
Longer-term, Treasury Secretary
Paulson should prod necessary banking
reforms. These include new management
and business practices at bond rating
agencies and getting rid of the off-book
banksstructured investment vehicles
invented by Citigroup and others that
borrow in the short-term commercial
paper market to make shaky ARMs.
Federally charted banks that are not
allowed such loose practices, and doing
so off books smell of fraud.
Raising automobile efficiency to an
average 55 mpg is not far fetched and
could be accomplished sooner than 2030,
as suggested by Senator Clinton.
Finally, if China insists on
subsidizing U.S. purchases of yuan to
finance exports, the U.S. government can
tax conversion of dollars into yuan to
ensure those exports are sold at market
prices in the United States. Washington
could use the revenue to pay off the
bonds held by Peoples Bank of China.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission.
|