- A normal U.S. economy is likely to look a lot different, and worse, after the credit crisis is over and financial markets settle down.
- Companies will continue to struggle to raise cash for expansion and innovation as investors and lenders remain focused on conserving capital.
- Workers, too, may have less flexibility to go after new opportunities, because many will be stuck where they are -- in homes worth less than the balances on their mortgages.
- ``Once you've made terrible, overly optimistic errors, that paralyzes you for some time,'' says economist Paul Samuelson, a Nobel laureate.
- The bottom line: The U.S. may have to get used to a new definition of normal, characterized by weaker productivity gains, slower economic growth, higher unemployment and a diminished financial-services industry.
- Long-term growth in the U.S. may drop to 2 percent to 2.5 percent a year from the 3 percent rate of the last 15 years (not if the government reporting machine has anything to do with it! I'm looking for 5,6, dare I say 7%! By the 2nd half? Ok ok that's amibitous - let's be content with 2009)
- Even after markets recover, ``the cost of risk capital is likely to be significantly higher than during the credit bubble,'' he says. (not if you print new capital out of DC printing presses at a rate of 1:5?)
- Less risk-taking can mean a less-vibrant economy, says Samuelson, 93, an emeritus professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts. ``What you could lose are some new ideas that would otherwise get to be practical and get their chance,'' he says.
- Workers too are feeling the fallout from the credit crisis. The share of respondents in a May 1-8 Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times poll who described themselves as financially secure fell to the lowest level since 1992.
- The depressed housing market may keep some workers from pulling up stakes to pursue new employment. ``Many times, job candidates are willing to talk to you about an opening,'' says Sally Stetson, co-founder of Salveson Stetson Group, an executive-search firm in Radnor, Pennsylvania. ``But then reality sets in as they look at their home price and they pull back.''
Well at least we, unlike Japan, are welcoming immigrants here to help drive the economy & create growth. What's that? Oh... um... well... um... well we still have better football players than Japan. So take that! How clear can I make it that we are not at all like Japan!
And send those 2 Bloomberg writers some Kool Aid. Sheesh, what a downer - they are missing the 2nd half recovery for the forest.
Conclusion: Buy stocks. It's all priced in. And we are nothing like Japan.








2 comments:
Came across this article, thought you might be interested since its something you've hit on in the past...has some hard data to chew on too. I'm simply baffled at how the Fed/government/Wall Street can ignore this.
"China's New Export: Inflation"
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/JubaksJournal/ChinasNewestExportInflation.aspx
This author also seemed to be delusional you know... ;)..
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/governments-numbers-racket-about-blow/story.aspx?guid=%7bF91A0843-69B4-4C0C-92CE-B835D9907945%7d&dist=TNMostRead&print=true&dist=printTop
Cheers..
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