Sunday , 22 December 2024

U.S. Economy Faces 5 Plausable Doomsday Scenarios

Most signs point to a slow and steady recovery, but what if the pessimists are right, again? What if the United States isn’t in the slow-lane to recovery, but rather on the precipice of another decline — a double dip? [If so,] where might this re-recession begin? Words: 988

So say Derek Thompson and Daniel Indiviglio in an article* in this month’s isue of The Atlantic (http://www.theatlantic.com). Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.FinancialArticleSummariesToday.com, presents below further edited [..] excerpts from the article for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. (Please note that this paragraph must be included in any article reposting to avoid copyright infringement.) The article goes on to say:

[Below] …we have imagined five financial earthquake scenarios, each with a single epicenter – housing, consumers, toxic assets, Europe, and the debt – …listed in order of likelihood.

1. Housing’s Mini-Bubble Pops
Perhaps nothing poses as big a concern to the U.S. economy as its housing market. [Did] …the government’s efforts to stabilize the market through a buyer credit, ultra-low mortgage rates, and mortgage modification programs pan out [or] did it just create another mini-bubble that’s beginning to pop now that the support has been withdrawn?

Here’s the scenario.
a) Weak home sales and continuing foreclosures result in climbing real estate inventory [causing:] i) new homes [to become] even less attractive which further reduces construction jobs
ii) downward pressure on home prices, which makes it harder for struggling homeowners to sell their home to avoid foreclosure and keeps strategic default rates high, exacerbating the problem.
b) Lower home values encourage Americans to save more and spend less, since their wealth is effectively reduced.
c) The Dow drops and credit markets tighten even further, suffocating private investment just as homeowners bunker down and slash spending.
d) Growth turns negative.

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2. Increased Consumer Savings Break the Economy
You, the American consumer, are reloading savings after a debt-fueled decade [b]ut as any general will tell you, when an entire squad reloads at once, it leaves everybody vulnerable. It’s the same with the economy.

Here’s the scenario.
a) Consumer sentiment continues to fall slowly, and spending turns negative again.
b) Small businesses hold off replenishing their inventories or adding new workers.
c) Wages and hours freeze.
d) Unemployment takes a leap toward 10 percent in October.
e) Congress remains paralyzed, because it’s only weeks away from the mid-terms.
f) The stock market sees business revenue trending flat, joblessness rising and Congress doing nothing, and it sparks a 300-point sell-off.
g) Americans, frightful for their savings, cut back spending even more the next month.
h) Growth turns negative.

3. Toxic Assets Return
[In the previous] bank bailout]…the Treasury intended to purchase the toxic assets from banks which were the source of investors’ uncertainty concerning bank stability but couldn’t figure out a way to do this quickly enough to make it effective. As a result, the banks were largely stuck with these bad assets. We just don’t know how bad – yet.

Here’s the scenario.
a) The residential real estate market’s problems continue. Even once foreclosures begin to decline, we see waves of defaults, as modification program participants re-default at rates of 30% to 50%.
b) Commercial mortgage-backed securities continue to deteriorate, as some businesses struggle with weak consumer demand.
c) Home and commercial real estate values keep declining, and so do the value of the assets that back them.
d) Banks with exposure to these toxic securities see another round of losses, and investors question their stability.
e) The market plummets.
f) Credit freezes.
g) Growth turns negative.

4. Europe Falls Apart
Europe seems to have avoided an all-out collapse of confidence in its ability to pay back its debt [b]ut things can change – and fast.
Here’s the scenario.
a) Slow growth in weak Eurozone states like Greece, Spain, and Italy turns negative and spooks investors, who demand higher returns on government debt.
b) Europe’s bond rates spike.
c) Countries announce further austerity — tax increases and spending cuts — which strangles our biggest export market. d) The EU central bank responds by announcing a plan to write down troubled debt, which dings some Americans banks.
e) In a flight to quality debt, the dollar appreciates. This hurts our exports even more.
f) As the trade deficit gapes open and manufacturing’s good run dead ends, the stock market plummets, taking household wealth down with it.
g) Families looking to restore balance sheets cut back on spending, and the American producer loses the American consumer and the European buyer.
h) Growth turns negative.

5. Debt Finally Catches Up to Us
Interest rates on U.S. debt are low today for one big reason. Investors trust the United States, at least more than they trust other countries. If the people giving us money suddenly have as little faith in America as Americans, that could change – and quickly.

Here’s the scenario.
a) The bond market can strike without warning, as it did in Europe earlier this year. If uncertainty with our political process gets reflected in our interest rate, we’ll have a harder time affording debt, 55% of which has to be rolled over in the next three years.
b) Pension and mutual funds with government debt would be written down, causing Americans to save even more of their paychecks.
c) We’d be left with two bad choices: tax cuts to juice consumption or tax hikes to please our lenders.

At that point, it would be too late to avoid a double dip.

*http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/09/5-doomsday-scenarios-for-the-us-economy/62445/

– The above article consists of reformatted edited excerpts from the original for the sake of brevity, clarity and to ensure a fast and easy read. The author’s views and conclusions are unaltered.
Permission to reprint, in whole or in part, is granted provided full credit is given as per paragraph two above.
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One comment

  1. The big question is this: How will the feds respond to negative growth? Rampant money printing, is my guess. Hyperinflation seems to be baked in to the cake.