Wait, More Women Have Accused Eric Swalwell of Sexual Misconduct?
OpenAI Faces Investigation Over Allegations That ChatGPT Helped Mass Shooter Kill Two Peop...
It’s ‘Shoot the Messenger Week’ As Jen Psaki Slams Local Media Holding a...
Do The Podcaster's Even Matter? New Polling Suggests That They Don't
US Oil & Gas Just Totally Embarrassed CA Dem Tom Steyer After He...
Victory Over Death
DOJ Reaches Settlement in Landmark Case Over Biden-Era Government Censorship of Americans
Chinese Researcher Sentenced to Prison for Smuggling E. coli DNA into U.S.
Welcome Home: Artemis II Astronauts Return After Historic Moon Orbit
Trump: 'No Nuclear Weapon' Is 99 Percent of Iran Deal Talks
Disgruntled Worker Charged with Arson After Allegedly Burning Down $500M Warehouse Over Pa...
Ex-Staffer Says That Rep. Eric Swalwell Sexually Assaulted Her
'Ketamine Queen' Gets 15 Years in Prison After Supplying Ketamine Linked to Matthew...
Democrat Politician Who Targeted Easter Churchgoers Also Attacked July Fourth Celebrants
Why America Leads the World in Innovation
OPINION

The Economy Is Not Collapsing, Nor Will Stocks

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The Economy Is Not Collapsing, Nor Will Stocks
Despite the disappointing jobs report for March, it’s very difficult to make a realistic case that the economy is falling off a cliff, or that some kind of double-dip recession is on the way. Or that a Ben Bernanke QE3 is likely.
Advertisement
 
Sure, the 120,000 gain in nonfarm payrolls -- roughly half of expectations -- is causing a downgrade in growth psychology. Ditto for the 31,000 drop in household employment. But if you smooth out these numbers over three months, payrolls have averaged a 212,000 increase, while small-business household jobs are still up a big 415,000.
 
But let’s not forget other data points: ISM indexes in the mid-50s are still reasonably strong. Consumer confidence has been rising. Jobless claims have been falling. Car sales are solid. And chain-store sales are beating expectations. It still looks like a 2.5 to 3 percent economy.
 
Not 5 percent, as it should be coming out of a deep recession. There are too many policy obstacles for that. Overspending, huge tax threats, a highly interventionist Fed policy, and Obamacare regulations, mandates, and taxes have damaged the animal spirits and held back growth from the normal spring-back off a deep recession. And these policy issues are not going to be resolved until well after the election. So instead of growing at 4 to 5 percent, as is the post-WWII norm, the recovery is only 2.5 percent.
Advertisement
 
But that has all been built into the stock market, which has over the past three years rallied on the strength of the tremendous performance of private-sector businesses. As per Monday’s Wall Street Journal lead article, U.S. businesses have emerged from the recession stronger, more profitable, and cash-flow rich. The business recovery is not going to falter, although businesses are not going to rush to hire new workers until they see a resolution of the various fiscal, monetary, and regulatory problems.
 
Nonetheless, because of the strength of business, I think the stock market still has value and should be bought on the dips. Investors should not overreact to one month’s jobs report. That game is never worth the candle. And incidentally, energy-price headwinds may be slowing down, as crude oil and gasoline begin to level off.
 
I do agree with economists Jim Pethokoukis and David Malpass that extended unemployment benefits and other policy mistakes have so lowered the labor-participation rate that 8.2 percent unemployment is in fact way understated. Congressman Duncan Hunter wants the official unemployment rate to include the number of individuals who gave up looking for work. This is already published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as the U-5 rate, which currently stands at 9.6 percent. That number probably more accurately reflects the joblessness problem.
Advertisement
 
But be that as it may, the economy is not collapsing, no matter what the March jobs figures show. Nor will the stock market collapse. If the dollar continues to stabilize, holding down energy prices and steadying consumer real incomes, that plus the pristine financial condition of business augurs reasonably well for future stock prices, although new advances will come at a slower slog.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement