When Will The Recovery Begin? Never
by Robert Reich
The so-called “green shoots” of recovery are turning brown in the scorching summer sun. In fact, the whole debate about when and how a recovery will begin is wrongly framed. On one side are the V-shapers who look back at prior recessions and conclude that the faster an economy drops, the faster it gets back on track. And because this economy fell off a cliff late last fall, they expect it to roar to life early next year. Hence the V shape.
Unfortunately, V-shapers are looking back at the wrong recessions. Focus on those that started with the bursting of a giant speculative bubble and you see slow recoveries. The reason is asset values at bottom are so low that investor confidence returns only gradually.
That’s where the more sober U-shapers come in. They predict a more gradual recovery, as investors slowly tiptoe back into the market.
Personally, I don’t buy into either camp. In a recession this deep, recovery doesn’t depend on investors. It depends on consumers who, after all, are 70 percent of the U.S. economy. And this time consumers got really whacked. Until consumers start spending again, you can forget any recovery, V or U shaped.
Problem is, consumers won’t start spending until they have money in their pockets and feel reasonably secure. But they don’t have the money, and it’s hard to see where it will come from. They can’t borrow. Their homes are worth a fraction of what they were before, so say goodbye to home equity loans and refinancings. One out of ten home owners is under water — owing more on their homes than their homes are worth. Unemployment continues to rise, and number of hours at work continues to drop. Those who can are saving. Those who can’t are hunkering down, as they must.
Eventually consumers will replace cars and appliances and other stuff that wears out, but a recovery can’t be built on replacements. Don’t expect businesses to invest much more without lots of consumers hankering after lots of new stuff. And don’t rely on exports. The global economy is contracting.
My prediction, then? Not a V, not a U. But an X. This economy can’t get back on track because the track we were on for years — featuring flat or declining median wages, mounting consumer debt, and widening insecurity, not to mention increasing carbon in the atmosphere — simply cannot be sustained.
The X marks a brand new track — a new economy. What will it look like? Nobody knows. All we know is the current economy can’t “recover” because it can’t go back to where it was before the crash. So instead of asking when the recovery will start, we should be asking when and how the new economy will begin. More on this to come.
Robert Reich was the nation’s 22nd Secretary of Labor and is a professor at the University of California at Berkeley. His latest book is “Supercapitalism.”
This is called some sort of irreversible depression. Capitalism has many stages to progress till it reaches the top position before collapse. Manufacturing based economy is some where in the middle state and generally it takes the long-term position in capitalist economic systems. This lingers on till technology and science replaces the man and instal machines. Machines produce more goods than demands therefor. Effects of advertisements start giving negative results due to abundance of goods in the markets. Once this stage is reached, excessive profit money get diverted into the last stage of capitalism where money get used for speculations and gambling games just to keep the returns on capital intact. Epitome of capitalism is the stock markets. Once the economic players start playing these games, the time for collapse of the system starts.
The final stage is now on. money is being used in stock market across the world to maintain the returns of those capitalists. What would be the next game? They cannot not revert to manufacturing economy as there is already an abundance created by technological marvels. The State is used by the capitalists to ‘manage’ the situation of these big cats. Stimulus money has to go to big cats only to savee them from the collapse. State has no independent status for its own activities away from the capitalist class. Both of them take measures to protect each other. They are on quid pro quo basis. This is a common scene across the globe where capitalist economic systems are in practice. as such there would not be any reversal to sound economic systems in the manufacturing sector.