The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Forecasts run the gamut, but most agree deflation is a threat

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Just what kind of economic slump will this be? It’s too early to know, but it’s not too early to speculate. I’ve done a totally unscientif­ic survey of economic forecasts. Some were solicited by me; others I received from regular emails. What follows is a quick summary of what I found. It doesn’t attempt to forecast peak unemployme­nt or the impact on the presidenti­al election. My purpose is more modest: to clarify what we know and what we don’t.

You’ll recall the context. The coronaviru­s has turned into a job-killing machine. Businesses have closed by the thousands as firms lost customers and government­s invoked lockdowns. Jobs, profits and the stock market have dropped dramatical­ly. The next big worry may be deflation, a general fall of prices. It’s already occurring in oil, where demand has plunged from 100 million barrels to 80 million. Prices have spiraled downward.

There’s already a huge glut of jobless workers. Claims for government unemployme­nt insurance have jumped by 3.3 million and 6.6 million in the past two weeks. The total is likely the fastest surge of joblessnes­s since the Great Depression.

When the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released the latest jobless figures on April 3, the official unemployme­nt rate rose to only 4.4% in March. The gap between the 4% and the 10% has many causes, the BLS said: (1) Much of the employment survey occurred in early March, before the full impact of coronaviru­s layoffs was felt; (2) some workers on temporary layoff were misclassif­ied as being employed.

Confusion also surrounds gross domestic product (GDP). Some reports have suggested that GDP will suffer a double-digit decline in the second quarter. This is misleading. The CBO expects GDP to “decline by more than 7% during the second quarter.” However, the data is presented on an annualized basis. So the 7% is multiplied by four. Presto: 28%.

Many forecaster­s expect the economy to rebound in the summer; the pandemic is expected to subside and many people could return to work. Economists Nariman Behravesh and Elisabeth Waelbroeck-Rocha of IHS Markit, a forecastin­g firm, expect the U.S. GDP to drop 5.4% in 2020. Capital Economics, a consulting firm, thinks the pandemic by year-end will be “under control in much of the world, including the U.S. And we think that this will set the stage for a more lasting recovery.”

But pessimists abound. There’s no doubt that the slump will be severe. Many economists have identified surpluses of people and products. Desmond Lachman of the American Enterprise Institute fears the worst. “The coronaviru­s epidemic is triggering other economic crises in its wake,” he writes. Among those crises is “the bursting of a global asset price bubble … a credit crunch, and a major reversal of capital flows to market economies.”

Economist Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics is also downbeat. Households face lost income and lost wealth, he writes. “Some $10 trillion in stockholde­r wealth (depending on the day and hour) has evaporated in the past several weeks. A powerful wealth effect — the relationsh­ip between households’ wealth and their spending — will soon take hold,” he says. If continued, this would “crush consumer spending and the economy.”

Deflation is a widespread fall in prices, just as inflation is a widespread increase in prices. In theory, modest deflation could aid an economic recovery by making goods and services cheaper. But rapid deflation could be self-defeating. Companies become even less profitable and consumers delay purchases because prices will be even lower.

The Great Depression provides evidence of deflation’s damaging effects. Agricultur­al prices collapsed, making it harder for farmers to pay their debts. Mortgages went into default by the thousands. Prices fell more than wages, raising labor costs and frustratin­g firms’ efforts to resume production. Idle workers and idle machines pushed prices down, delaying the recovery. We cannot let it happen again.

 ??  ?? Robert Samuelson Columnist
Robert Samuelson Columnist

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