Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Why No Recession?

 Financial FAQs

I said last month we know why the US economy is still growing. Consumers keep spending, and the unemployment rate, though rising, is just 4.3 percent. The second revision of second quarter economic growth confirms this as well, jumping from 2.4 to a 3.0 percent growth rate.

But the downward revision of -818,000 nonfarm payroll jobs by the BLS from March 2023 to March 2024 showed not as many jobs were created as originally estimated, and it has begun to panic the financial markets.

And if consumers don’t keep spending where they spend the most—leisure and healthcare—what will keep US from a recession? It’s government spending via Bidenomics, President Biden’s legislation to modernize the economy. We should ignore the protests from conservatives of too much government spending and too much public debt for the moment. It’s what is keeping us at full employment.

Paul Krugman opined earlier in the year on the particulars of President Biden’s ‘New’ New Deal legislation, which is investing as much in the U.S. economy as Roosevelt’s New Deal.

“The fact, however, is that Biden has put in place a very ambitious agenda — major enhancements of Obamacare, student debt relief, big infrastructure spending, large-scale promotion of semiconductors and green energy that have led to a surge in manufacturing investment.”


It has led to a very big jump in Manufacturing investment, for starters, that is creating more high-paying jobs—800,000 manufacturing jobs to date. Although overall manufacturing activity has been shrinking per the latest surveys—even with investments in the construction of new Manufacturing facilities having soared from $78 billion in 2020 to $237 billion this July—it should means better days ahead for the manufacturing sector.

This is important because July’s BLS Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) report shows a weakening labor market. The number of job openings dropped to 7.7 million from its high of 11 million openings in 2022 as the economy rushed to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. (That’s still a lot of jobs looking for workers.)

The number of job openings decreased in health care and social assistance (-187,000); state and local government, excluding education (-101,000); and transportation, warehousing, and utilities (-88,000). Job openings increased in professional and business services (+178,000) and in federal government (+28,000).

 BLS.gov

This is further evidence that growth will continue and perhaps keep consumers shopping for bargains, which is why inflation and rising prices should no longer be a problem, even as the Fed begins to cut interest rates this month.

Consumer confidence is rising again as well, which should help sustain the rally, as consumers seem to be worrying less about their job, per the Conference Board survey, even though personal savings have declined to dangerous lows.

“The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® rose in August to 103.3 (1985=100), from an upwardly revised 101.9 in July. The Present Situation Index—based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labor market conditions—improved to 134.4 from 133.1 in July.”

So we still depend on consumers to carry most of the load to sustain the strong growth, but government has to give a hand to keep them “in the game,” as I’ve been saying.

We will know more come Friday’s unemployment report.

Harlan Green © 2024

Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

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