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Friday, October 10, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Glimmers of Hope Emerge in Financial Crisis
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- As bleak as things look right now, there are reasons to believe we may get through this economic decline sooner than the pessimists' predictions of one to two years.

We've been through 10 recessions since the end of the 1940s, and the records tell us they averaged less than 10 months when they lifted national unemployment to an average of 7.6 percent. We're still a long way from that jobless number.

For nearly two years now, the economic forecasters have been saying we're heading into a recession, and many say we're in a recession now.

We are likely to be in one in this quarter (July, August and September) because exports, the one economic pillar propping up growth, have fallen as a result of a weakening global economy. Retail sales are flat or worse, and factory orders and construction have fallen sharply on top of the credit and debt catastrophe that has struck banks and Main Street businesses.

The definition of a recession is two back-to-back quarters when the economy is not growing. We had one month (last December) of negative growth, but the economy perked up unexpectedly and resumed its growth, despite those who predicted otherwise. We grew at a revised 2.8 percent in the second quarter, largely due to the $1.6 trillion a year in U.S. exports in the global economy -- one of those rarely mentioned "fundamentals" in our economy that John McCain was talking about and seemed to upset Barack Obama.

So the professional pessimists and pundits who said we were in a recession last year and earlier this year were flat wrong.

But even a stopped clock is right at least twice a day, and it looks as if they'll be right in the last half of this year. But how deep will this recession be and how long will it last?

We're in the endgame of a furious election battle when Democrats are painting as bleak a picture of the economy as they possibly can. Obama likes to make comparisons to the Great Depression in his campaign speeches, which is silly and irresponsible. At the economy's lowest point in 1932, stocks fell nearly 90 percent. We're a long way from that kind of deep decline.

Then there is another one of those "fundamentals" that McCain was referring to earlier -- the incredibly productive American workforce.

Unemployment has climbed, and we've lost -- and will lose -- several million jobs this year. But unemployment as of August was 6.1 percent -- in sharp contrast to the 9 percent to 10.8 percent levels we endured in the early 1970s and 1980s when interest rates and inflation hit double digits.

But we have several things going for us in this latest economic decline, and chief among them is Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who wrote the book on what led to the Great Depression. That's when the Fed tightened the money supply instead of injecting liquidity into the economy's banking institutions -- and then FDR raised taxes.

Bernanke and his economic partner Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson aren't going to make those mistakes. Last week's half-point interest-rate cut will be followed by others, while the Fed and Treasury continue to make money available to keep the nation's lending arteries open until we can work our way out of this trouble.

In the meantime, the Treasury and the Federal Housing Administration have been pushing to renegotiate subprime mortgage loans at the rate of 200,000 a month for creditworthy homeowners who are trying to stay in their homes.

Then there are the underappreciated Bush tax cuts that have helped make our economy more resilient than it otherwise would have been. They helped us bounce back from the 9/11 terrorist attacks when the economy stopped breathing and recover from one financial breakdown after another, natural disasters and now the subprime mortgage and credit debacle.

There are a few other fundamentals at work here that will help us out of this economic hole, like relatively low interest rates, plunging oil prices that are cutting the price of gasoline at the pump, and a real-estate market that is showing glimmers of a comeback.

Pending home sales increased by an unexpected 7.4 percent between July and August, pushing the National Association of Realtors index of pending sales to 93.4 from an upwardly revised reading of 87. That's the highest number since the summer of 2007, and a sign that homebuyers are returning to the market to take advantage of bargain-basement home prices.

Nevertheless, the national mood of gloom and pessimism runs deep as Paulson and his Treasury associate, Neel Kashkari, try to fix this mess.

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Haha...
hahahahahahahahahahahaha. Which cloud are you living on. 'Leo, take the blue tablet', hahahahahaha!

hmmmm
to me all the years of bad policy, like the cra law, low interest rates, stupid Congressman who say that banks must make bad loans, and banks that go along with idiot policy,s more and more gov etc is coming home to roost now and we got a ways to go before we hit bottom. get ready for a long ride down. Hmm i knew i should have dumped my stocks last year after reading some things of what was going on. Ha i guess now i work till i am age 80 and then croak.

Hope
I have hope because Obama is not 20 points ahead with all this bad news.

Who wants to buy a pig in a poke?

mr_sparky
I figure that working till 80 is in the cards for me as well. Tell you what, I'll job-share with you for the greeter's postion at Wal-Mart.

One other alternative-- how about if we just not pay our mortgages for the next few months, then cry boo-hoo to the government about how we just didn't understand what those nasty bankers were doing to us, then let the taxpayers of America pay instead.

Too bad we were brought up with all these archaic concepts like "work ethic" and "honesty" and "personal responsibility."

bizarre
I am not convinced the economy is going to be the disaster so many people are predicting. We have a serious confidence problem now do to companies not trusting the books of other companies (or even their own). But it does seem like if the various bailout attempts manage to free up credit, things will not be as bad as they could be if say, the problem had just been allowed to fester.

But Lambro's account is just bizarre. We have gone through an extended period of weak growth which itself was obtained by running up gigantic deficits making it harder to deal with any coming recession. And the credit crunch that has dropped the market more than 30% from its recent high gets one sentence in passing. And that 30% drop is not supposed to be worrisome because it isn't the 90% of the great depression. But that 90% was measured 3 years in, while we are months into the current market drop.

I am all for optimism on the economy, but it should be done in a way that makes it look like the writer knows what he is talking about.


Honor - a moral virtue
It is a moral virtue that disappeared from the marketplace and our society over the last 40 years of Neo-Communist infestation.

Say one thing - mean another.
Rob Peter to pay Paul.
The ends justify the means.

These are all National Socialist scams. The most widespread implementation of this dogma was in creating these untenable mortgages through coercion and government abuses (ACORN, Fannie, and Freddy) and then hiding them behind an army of lawyers (predominantly leftists and sympathizers) and a complicit media (in the tank, hard-left) with complex securities and "credit default swaps" (lawyer-invented frauds to evade insurance regulations).

What we see now is the results of abusing trust - of making promises you have no intention of keeping and borrowing without the intent to honor your debts. There can be no trade without Honor. There can be no Honor without Moral Virtue. There can be no Moral Virtue so long as we allow poisons of Egotism and Relativism to dominate our social culture and our judiciary.

As John Adams noted: "We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."

Oh, brother...
"Bernanke and his economic partner Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson aren't going to make those mistakes."

Baloney. It is liquidity - inflation, that is the cause of our present economic mess. It's how we were forced to pay for the dramatic spending under Bush and Congress. And you think Paulson and Bernanke are going correct this by printing more money and giving it away? Wait until the election is over. Bernanke is going to going to let inflation fly to pay for all this liquidity. I think we're going to see $5 a gallon for gas and further economic decline, necessarily, to pay for these bailouts and God knows what else from the Democrats coming in. You are as naive as Kudlow, Lambro.
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