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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
Despite the Gloom, More Bush Boom
by Larry Kudlow
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If things are so bad, why are they so good?

With all the gloom coming out of Wall Street, the Democrats on the campaign trail and the mainstream media, a remarkable thing just happened: Real gross domestic product, the best summary report of the American economy, came in at a breathtaking 3.9 percent annual rate for the third quarter. In fact, following the 3.8 percent growth rate for the second quarter, the U.S. economy has posted its strongest quarterly growth in four years. The economy actually appears to be speeding up,  following the relatively sluggish performance of the prior 18 months.

On top of this, the inflation rate is actually slowing down.  The consumer spending deflator is reading 2.1 percent for the past year, compared to over 3 percent six quarters ago. The core inflation rate is down to 1.9 percent, below  the Fed's 2 percent target.

Even employment is holding its own. According to Automatic Data Processing's private employment survey, which showed its strongest gain in four months, October looks like it will produce about 125,000 new jobs.

Meanwhile, rising exports of American goods and services are booming to such an extent that the deep housing recession is being cancelled out. And while many continue to predict a consumer collapse because of falling home prices and tighter credit, after-tax inflation-adjusted income is 4.1 percent ahead  of last year, for a $344 billion gain, while the purchase cost of energy prices are flat. The little noticed factoid is that consumer energy use per unit of GDP has actually fallen by more than 50 percent in recent decades.

Again: If things are so bad, why are they so good?

The stock market roared after the Federal Reserve cut its target rate on Wednesday by 25 basis points to 4.5 percent. The rate cut was a small insurance policy, just in case the subprime credit crunch and the housing downturn take a larger toll on the economy.

But listening to the Democratic presidential debate on Tuesday, you'd think it was 1929 all over again. The litany of scare-talk complaints includes China trade unfairness, globalization, immigration, income inequality, stagnant wages, a shrinking middle class, the sinking dollar and high oil prices.

Yes, there is home deflation on Main Street and loan deflation on Wall Street. It will continue. But what about the rest of the story? When you listen to the hedge-fund short-sellers and the liberal politicians as they attempt to discredit the Bush economic boom, you could almost fall for their bear-market seduction. But the seductress turns out to be an economic harlot -- not a beautiful woman.

The true message of the strong economy is that we're virtually guaranteed of a Goldilocks soft landing or better -- and certainly not a recession.

It's interesting that while the Bush tax cuts of 2003 continue to encourage investment and entrepreneurship, expanding national income and higher tax collections have brought the big bad budget deficit down to $160 billion, or roughly 1 percent of GDP. Using something called the primary deficit -- which extracts net interest on the debt and can be used to measure fiscal stimulus on the economy -- we actually have a 70 billion surplus Continued...

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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An economic system
that acted in a chaotic (mathematical) way would tend to be stable across a large range of values for each component. Our system has reached such a size. Individual components of the economy (housing, autos, regions like California) could have dramatic swings while the economy as a whole would tend NOT to react. Even if we hit 4 million foreclosures - only about 60% will actually result in lender owned RE, 2.4m homes out of a stock of 120 million is not a large percentage. Also, 2.4m families will not become homeless, they will move into rentals increasing the demand (price/value) in those areas hardest hit.

When we as a nation continue to purchase a billion bottles of water and a 1/2 billion cups of coffee at the cost of over $6 a gallon/$30 a gallon, gas at $3 or even $4 a gallon is still cheap. I drive to work and to/from school to pick up our daughter, about 35 miles a day, at 24mpg, I use about 1.5 gallons of gas or $4.50. Less than a latte and about 2 bottles of water.

There is pain in the economy but it is like a sliver, not an amputation...

Republican Rose Colored Glasses
I like Larry Kudlow and watch him from time to time, but he is not exactly an unbiased observer of the financial scene. His view of America is based on how well things are going in lower Manhatten and Long Island. We are running up massive trade deficits, trying to bail out the banks by lowering interest rates, thus creating a weak dollar which gives the illusion that we are making tons of money. Somebody needs to inform Larry that turning our dollar into Monopoly money is not a good thing. Most every tax policy that Kudlow likes rewards the top 1% of the country at the expense of the other 99%. He gives a pass to guys like O'Neal at Merrill who earn outrageous sums of money for mismanaging their corporation yet get's bent out of shape because Congress wants to increase the minimum wage. God forbid a diswasher get's an extra $ 1.00 an hour. Yeah Larry, times are good out there on Long Island, but try and sell a home in Michigan or find a good paying job. When Mr. Kudlow goes to bed at night he probably dreams of his hero's Adam Smith, Milton Friedman, Alan Greenspan, and Ronald Reagan taking the place of Roosevelt, Lincoln, Washington, and Jefferson on Mount Rushmore.
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