Socyberty > Economics

Why the Economy Feels So Bad

Many financial pundits cannot understand why people feel so bad about an economy that appears okay.

Page 1 of 2 | Prev 12Next»

Felt inflation, diverging income distribution, and competition for jobs and resources give a feeling to many consumers that things are not the way they are supposed to be.

A Tale of Two Economies

It seems every week a new report comes out claiming a recession in the USA, followed by a report saying the opposite. Similarly, the “decoupling” of the world's economies keeps making the news. Some say European will probably and Asian economies certainly will go down, too, whereas others predict a decoupling of growth. The public becomes increasingly pessimistic about the future outlook, as dropping consumer sentiment measures across the industrialized world show. Optimistic pundits are getting increasingly exasperated at the seeming disconnect between what their numbers show and the gloomy feelings pervading the common people.

For instance, Brian Wesbury, chief economist at First Trust Advisors, points to all the good news. In an interview on Nightly Business Report he rejects the idea that the USA will go into a recession: 2007 U.S. growth 3% (4% excluding the housing sector), total sales including all of the new stores growing strongly, unemployment rate still at 5%, incomes up.

On The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer (PBS) Stephen Moore, senior economics writer for the Wall Street Journal, defends the good news against Daniel Gross, financial columnist for Slate and Newsweek magazine: a six-year economic expansion, steady job growth, very low unemployment. Nevertheless, Americans have been nervous about the future for over a year.

One Number for All

For starters it is difficult to express in a handful of numbers the experience of 60 million Britons, 65 million French, 82 million Germans, and much less 300 million Americans or 320 million inhabitants of the Eurozone. As Wesbury points out, the Midwest is not like New York City. The real estate market in Berlin, Germany, is not like the one in Paris, France. Certainly, a Consumer Price Index for the USA cannot reflect the many different lives from students to pensioners. A large economy also consists of many numbers. The American “Index of Leading Indicators,” for example, has 10 components. For every good number someone can quote a bad number. Daniel Gross points to the weak jobs report, the contracting manufacturing sector, rising inflation, and high energy prices.

Growing Disparity

The differences in experience show in one particular area in both the USA and Europe. The median incomes barely moved, but incomes at the very high end ran up tremendously. Corporate officers had large pay raises and now make over a hundred times more than their average employee. The radical wage demands of many European trade unions speak to the discontent. But it goes beyond the top. Tobin Smith of ChangeWave Investor justifies the continued strength in consumer spending with the "super-spenders," the top 20% of earners who account for 40% of U.S. consumption. They saw their income growing at a 5% rate a year. The other 80% did not do as well and consequently feel left behind. Even workers are growing apart, though. The rapidly transforming economies require new skills that leave out many people without the proper education, while even young university graduates can score high paying jobs.

International Competition

By many measures the industrialized countries use far more resources per capita than the emerging economies. For instance, the USA has an Ecological Footprint over 10 global hectare, most Western European countries over 3, whereas most of Asia's and Africa's is under 1. In 2004 the USA with about 5% of the world's population consumed 22% of the world's energy production. Europe excluding Russia with about 10% of the population took 20% of the energy. For decades these countries could do that almost unhindered. Now, though, large emerging economies like China, India, or Brazil demand their fair share. All morals aside the additional competition drives up the price for resources such as metals, oil, or food. At the same time these countries provide large pools of workers. People in the industrialized world thus get squeezed from both sides. The lower cost labor supply threatens jobs, while the demand for resources drives up prices. While economies as a whole may profit from the increased trade, people feel threatened by the changing world.

Changing Calculations

Daniel Gross contents that the U.S. economy is nowhere near as bad as it was back in 1992. But is it really? Some pundits claim that the U.S. government kept changing the way statistics get calculated to make them look better. They complain particularly about distortions to the government debt, the gross domestic product (GDP), the consumer price index (CPI), and the unemployment numbers. The responsible organizations do not deny the changes, but list economic reasons for them. Some also continue to provide the numbers calculated the old way, but these figures are rarely reported by the media. At the very least comparing the widely reported current numbers to those reported 20 years ago is questionable. If the complaints are true, the new numbers distort reality.

Page 1 of 2 | Prev 12Next»
0
Liked It
I Like It!
Related Articles
Is This a Recession or What?  |  Away From Home
Latest Articles in Economics
No More Queues in the Investigation  |  The Aftershock of 9/11 Still Reverberates Today
Comments (0)
Post Your Comment:
Name:  
Copy the code into this box:  
Inside Socyberty

Activism

 /

Advice

 /

Crime

 /

Death

 /

Disabled

 /

Economics

 /

Education

 /

Ethnicity

 /

Folklore

 /

Future

 /

Gay & Lesbians

 /

Government

 /

History

 /

Holidays

 /

Issues

 /

Languages

 /

Law

 /

Lifestyle Choices

 /

Men

 /

Military

 /

Organizations

 /

Paranormal

 /

People

 /

Philanthropy

 /

Philosophy

 /

Politics

 /

Psychology

 /

Relationships

 /

Religion

 /

Sexuality

 /

Social Sciences

 /

Society

 /

Sociology

 /

Spirituality

 /

Subcultures

 /

Support Groups

 /

Women

 /

Work


Popular Tags
Popular Writers
Socyberty
About Us
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Services
Submit an Article
Advertise with Us
Contact

© 2007 Copyright Stanza Ltd. All Rights Reserved.