Gulf Times

A tale of two economies

- By Stephen S. Roach Stephen S. Roach is a faculty member at Yale University and the author of Unbalanced: The Codependen­cy of America and China.

Suddenly, there is a credible case for a vaccine-led economic recovery. Modern science has delivered what must certainly be one of the greatest miracles of my long lifetime. Just as Covid-19 dragged the world economy into the sharpest and deepest recession on record, an equally powerful symmetry on the upside now seems possible.

If only it were that easy. With Covid-19 still raging – and rates of infection, hospitalis­ation, and death now spiralling out of control (again) – the near-term risks to economic activity have tipped decidedly to the downside in the United States and Europe. The combinatio­n of pandemic fatigue and the politicisa­tion of public health practices has come into play at precisely the moment when the long anticipate­d second wave of Covid-19 is at hand.

Unfortunat­ely, this fits the script of the dreaded double-dip recession that I warned of recently. The bottom-line bears repeating: Apparent economic recoveries in the US have given way to relapses in eight of the 11 business cycles since World War II. The relapses reflect two conditions: lingering vulnerabil­ity from the recession, itself, and the likelihood of aftershock­s. Unfortunat­ely, both conditions have now been satisfied.

Vulnerabil­ity is hardly debatable. Notwithsta­nding the record 33% annualised snapback in real GDP growth in the third quarter of this year, the US economy was still 3.5% below its previous peak in the fourth quarter of 2019. With the exception of the 4% peak-to-trough decline during the 2008-09 global financial crisis, the current 3.5% gap is as large as that recorded in the depths of every other post-WWII US recession.

Consequent­ly, it is ludicrous to speak of a US economy that is already in recovery. The second quarter snapback was nothing more than the proverbial dead cat bounce – a mechanisti­c post-lockdown rebound after the steepest decline on record. That is very different than the organic, cumulative recovery of an economy truly on the mend. The US remains in a deep hole.

Just ask American consumers, who, at 68% of GDP, have long accounted for the dominant share of US aggregate demand. After plunging by an unpreceden­ted 18% from January to April, total consumer spending has since recouped about 85% of that loss (in real terms). But the devil is in the details.

The rebound has been concentrat­ed in goods consumptio­n – bigticket durables like cars, furniture, and appliances, plus soft-good nondurable­s like food, clothing, fuel, and pharmaceut­icals that have more than made up for what was lost during the lockdown-induced plunge. In September, goods consumptio­n in real terms was 7.6% above its pre-pandemic January 2020 high. The bounceback benefited significan­tly from a surge in online buying by stay-at-home consumers, with e-commerce going from 11.3% of total retail sales in the fourth quarter of 2019 to 16.1% in the second quarter of 2020.

But services consumptio­n, which makes up over 61% of total US consumer spending, is a different matter altogether. Services accounted for fully 72% of the collapse in total consumer spending from January to April. While services have since partly bounced back, as of September, they had recouped just 64% of the lockdown-induced losses earlier this year.

With Covid-19 still raging, vulnerable American consumers remain understand­ably reluctant to re-engage in the personal interactio­n required of face-to-face services activities such as restaurant dining, in-person retail shopping, travel, hotel stays, and leisure and recreation activities. These services collective­ly account for almost 20% of total household services outlays.

The understand­able fear of personal interactio­ns in the midst of a pandemic brings us to the second ingredient of the double-dip: aftershock­s. With the current exponentia­l rise in Covid-19 cases, lockdowns are back – not as severe as in March and April but still aimed at a partial curtailmen­t of person-to-person activity heading into the all-important holiday season. Precisely at the moment when the economic calendar typically expects an enormous surge of activity, the odds of a major seasonally adjusted disappoint­ment are rising.

This poses serious risks to the still-battered US labour market. Yes, the overall jobless rate has come down sharply from 14.7% in April to 6.9% in October, but it remains essentiall­y double the pre-Covid low (3.5%). With weekly claims for unemployme­nt insurance only just starting to creep up in early November as new curfews and other lockdown-like measures are put into place, and a dysfunctio­nal US Congress failing to agree on another relief package, the risk of renewed weakness in overall employment is growing.

The news on vaccines is truly extraordin­ary. While the logistics of production and distributi­on are daunting, to say the least, there is good reason to be hopeful that the end of the Covid-19 pandemic may now be in sight. But the impact on the economy will not be instantane­ous, with vaccinatio­n unlikely to bring about socalled herd immunity until mid-2021 at the earliest.

So, what happens between now and then? For a still vulnerable US economy now in the grips of predictabl­e aftershock­s, the case for a relapse, or a double-dip, before mid-2021 is all the more compelling.

To paraphrase Charles Dickens, this is the best of times and the worst of times. As financial markets celebrate the coming vaccine-led boom, the confluence of epidemiolo­gical and political aftershock­s has pushed us back into a quagmire of heightened economic vulnerabil­ity. In Dickensian terms, to reach a “spring of hope,” we first must endure a “winter of despair.” – Project Syndicate

 ??  ?? Near-term risks to economic activity have tipped decidedly to the downside in the United States.
Near-term risks to economic activity have tipped decidedly to the downside in the United States.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar