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- <text id=91TT1319>
- <title>
- June 17, 1991: The Economy:Crawling Out Of the Slump
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 17, 1991 The Gift Of Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 48
- THE ECONOMY
- Crawling Out Of the Slump
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The recession may be ending, but some sectors are still hurting,
- and the recovery may be nothing to cheer about
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--Reported by Bernard Baumohl/New York, S.C.
- Gwynne/Washington and William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Not for months has Alan Greenspan been so downright
- bullish about the U.S. economy. Speaking last week in Osaka,
- Japan, the normally dour Federal Reserve chairman said he saw
- "clearly encouraging" signs that the recession is ending and
- mounting evidence of a "stronger-than-expected recovery." But
- back at home, hardly anyone else felt it. Wary Americans seemed
- a long way from embarking on a spending spree. "I used to go
- into a store and say, `I want that,' and not even ask how much
- it cost," says Liane Adduci, an ad-agency executive in Chicago.
- "Now I'm much more conservative." The unlikely but nagging
- chance of a layoff has kept her cautious, Adduci says. "I
- couldn't find a new job for eight months to a year," she
- explains. "I don't know anyone who doesn't live from paycheck
- to paycheck."
- </p>
- <p> Such misgivings threaten to turn the recovery, when it
- arrives, into a painfully weak one. Despite upticks in home
- sales and factory orders that indicate the 11-month-old slump
- could end this summer, economists say the rebound will be far
- less robust than any of the eight other U.S. recoveries since
- World War II. The outlook is bleak largely because the 1980s
- debt binge still hobbles companies and consumer spending and
- makes banks unwilling to lend. At the same time, the $318
- billion federal deficit handcuffs Washington's ability to
- stimulate business by cutting taxes and boosting spending--tactics that helped the U.S. come roaring out of previous
- slumps.
- </p>
- <p> A healthy sign of a rebound came last week when the
- government delivered its latest unemployment report. The figures
- showed that joblessness rose to 6.9% in May, up sharply from
- 6.6% in April, but hopeful economists turned their attention to
- a companion statistic indicating that U.S. companies created
- 59,000 new jobs last month. That broke an 11-month string of job
- losses that began last July. (The number of jobs can increase
- even as unemployment is rising because the two figures come
- from different Labor Department surveys that are often at
- odds.) Says Allen Sinai, chief economist for the Boston Co.
- Economic Advisers: "A strong hint that the recession has just
- about ended or may have already ended showed up in the May jobs
- report." But he adds, the economy "is crawling out of the
- recession, not bursting out of the gate."
- </p>
- <p> Many forecasters predict the economy will grow less than
- 3% in the 12 months that follow the recession, compared with a
- vigorous 6% average for previous postwar turnarounds. "The
- consumer won't feel any sense of recovery until December or
- early next year," says Susan Sterne, president of Economic
- Analysis Associates in Stowe, Vt. Concurs Wall Street economist
- Lawrence Kudlow: "This recovery just isn't going to have much
- torque."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the economy seems to be headed for a return to
- the same type of feeble expansion that saw the GNP rise just
- 2.5% in 1989 and about 1% in the first half of 1990, before the
- downturn took hold. "The recession is just one part of the big
- picture of sluggish growth since 1989," says Sinai. "It should
- be seen in that light."
- </p>
- <p> Weak growth would bring an anti-climactic end to a
- recession that began last July and worsened sharply after Saddam
- Hussein's forces invaded Kuwait in August. In the anxious weeks
- that followed, U.S. consumer confidence plunged to levels not
- seen since the 1981-82 slump before rebounding on the strength
- of the swift American-led victory in the gulf war. But gauges
- of consumer confidence began falling as soon as the euphoria
- wore off and have tumbled in each of the past two months.
- </p>
- <p> If the recession does end this summer, it would be similar
- in length to other postwar downturns, which lasted an average
- of 11 months. Despite the roller coaster of consumer emotion,
- however, strong U.S. exports have helped make the latest
- business contraction relatively mild. As measured from the third
- quarter last year, total U.S. GNP has so far dropped about 1.1%
- after adjusting for inflation, compared with an average decline
- of 2.7% for other slumps since World War II.
- </p>
- <p> Some consumers are starting to emerge from their bunkers.
- In a TIME/CNN poll in April, 30% of adults surveyed said they
- viewed the economic slump as the No. 1 problem facing the U.S.
- But in a TIME/CNN survey taken last week, the figure had
- slipped to 17%.
- </p>
- <p> After months of decline, the housing market is coming back
- cautiously, which has positive effects on other parts of the
- economy. Spurred by a drop in interest rates that trimmed the
- average cost of conventional home mortgages from 10.1% a year
- ago to as low as 9.25% last February, sales of new and existing
- homes have climbed for three straight months. That has brought
- a measure of financial relief to developers and homeowners whose
- properties were glutting the market. The rising demand helped
- reverse a falling trend for U.S. home prices, pushing the median
- price of existing homes to $100,200 in April, up 4.7% from the
- same month a year ago.
- </p>
- <p> Yet commercial real estate remains a disaster area, with
- largely vacant office towers bristling from urban landscapes
- across the U.S. "The real estate industry is stuck in the worst
- recession we've ever seen," says Neil Bluhm, co-founder of
- Chicago's JMB Realty Corp., which manages more than $20 billion
- worth of property. "There simply isn't any capital coming into
- the industry today. There will be absolutely no new construction
- commitments until, maybe, 1995."
- </p>
- <p> Unlike commercial developers, U.S. manufacturers have been
- shaking off their torpor as purchases of everything from steel
- to refrigerators have begun to pick up. Orders for U.S. factory
- goods climbed a healthy 1.8% in April, their first gain since
- last October.
- </p>
- <p> After months of steep payroll cuts, some companies may be
- ready to hire workers again. Milwaukee-based Manpower Inc., the
- largest U.S. temporary-employment agency, said 22% of 15,000
- corporate executives surveyed intend to expand their work forces
- this summer, while 10% plan new layoffs.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the stubborn overhang of consumer caution, cash
- registers have begun to ring more briskly at department stores
- and other big retail outlets, which were hard hit by the slump.
- In the first major sign that shoppers are returning, 13 of the
- top 20 U.S. retailers reported that sales last month increased
- over May 1990 levels.
- </p>
- <p> Some parts of the U.S. remain deeply mired. New England,
- where the slump arrived more than a year ago, has lost 200,000
- jobs since last July, a 3.2% decline. Because the scars run so
- deep, economists predict that any rebound in New England will
- trail a recovery in the rest of the country by at least six
- months.
- </p>
- <p> Even California could have a tough time shrugging off the
- slump. Cuts in defense spending have hurt the crucial aerospace
- industry, prompting state economists to predict that
- unemployment in the Golden State may average 7.6% this year. For
- Californians like Peter Perkins, a Los Angeles recording
- engineer, the evidence of an upturn has been bittersweet. After
- a radio production company laid him off in January, Perkins took
- two part-time jobs to meet the payments on his boat and a
- condominium investment. Last week he landed a new full-time
- position, but at a salary 25% below his old one. "I feel
- optimistic now about an upswing," says Perkins, "but there's
- been a shake-out in salaries. It's put the ball in the
- employer's court."
- </p>
- <p> Many industries that are particularly sensitive to
- cyclical swings in business activity are hard pressed to notice
- any improvements yet. The hotel business has suffered deeply as
- such corporate giants as IBM and AT&T have slashed their travel
- budgets to hold down costs. "Our company logo ought to be
- SURVIVE TILL '95," says Darryl Hartley-Leonard, president of the
- Hyatt chain. "We cannot assume that this is just the typical
- business cycle of an American recession. In my 27 years in the
- business, I've never seen anything like this."
- </p>
- <p> Many executives are adopting a show-me attitude. Says
- William Weiss, chairman of Ameritech, a Baby Bell phone company
- that serves five Midwestern states: "Despite what the Fed
- chairman says, I don't sense that business feels any strong
- sense of recovery. The government may have to play the role of
- cheerleader, but I wouldn't be as optimistic. We still have deep
- liquidity and credit problems that make it increasingly
- difficult for businesses to finance their way back."
- </p>
- <p> The heavy debt load weighs on every sector of the economy
- from consumers to the Federal Government. Burdened by
- overzealous borrowing, more than 60,000 companies with
- liabilities totaling a record $64 billion declared bankruptcy
- last year. The pace has quickened in 1991 as firms with
- liabilities of $34.6 billion failed in the first four months
- alone. Last week the city of Bridgeport, Conn. (pop. 142,000),
- became the largest U.S. municipality ever to declare bankruptcy
- when it filed for protection from creditors after failing to
- find a politically acceptable way to close a $12 million budget
- gap.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, bankers laden with bad credit have remained
- reluctant to make new loans. That has helped perpetuate a credit
- crunch that began last year when bank regulators tightened loan
- standards to avoid a repeat of the savings and loan fiasco. Even
- the Fed's lowering of interest rates in recent months has
- scarcely encouraged bank lending to pick up. Asserts Hugh
- Johnson, chief economist for First Albany, a securities firm:
- "More than at any time in the past, banks are dragging their
- feet."
- </p>
- <p> Another threat to the recovery is a slowdown in the world
- economy, which could take the steam out of U.S. exports.
- Policymakers in Germany and Japan have been deliberately
- restraining their economies by raising interest rates to keep
- inflation in check. Analysts on the staff of the European
- Community recently estimated that the economies of the group's
- 12 member nations would grow just 1.25% this year, down from
- 2.7% in 1990. Says Paul Horne, chief international economist for
- Smith Barney: "Near recession is how we describe the global
- economy today.''
- </p>
- <p> One world leader who appears to take a hands-off attitude
- toward the U.S. recession has been George Bush. "The
- Administration is irrelevant to economic policy," charges Barry
- Bosworth, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "There's
- nothing they can do, and they don't matter. There is no such
- thing as fiscal policy in the U.S."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Bush is cheerleading, if not tinkering. He quietly
- summoned 10 executives from companies as varied as General Mills
- and Apple Computer to the White House last month for a private
- chat about the recession. Said a CEO who took part: "There was
- a sense that the precipitous free fall in the economy was
- coming to an end, or may already be over. People are
- anticipating that there will be a rise off the bottom. But that
- is a hell of a long way from getting back to robust growth
- levels." From all indications, the rebound will be perfectly
- characteristic of everything else about the '90s: no instant
- gratification, just a long steady slog.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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