What Now?
Posted on Friday, October 30, 2009
My latest four posts:
- Durable Goods and GDP / Equity Market Collapse
- Q3 GDP: Subsidized Consumption Edition
- Thank You Cash for Clunkers
- Personal Income and Outlays Under Pressure
- Massive stimulus (think autos / housing)
- Inventory restocking (details of the coming "mother of all corrections" from July here)
Now, lets take a look at the historical data showing the importance of each to Q3's recovery.
Q3 GDP Breakdown

Unless you think autos, housing, or an inventory rebuild can be sustainable areas for future growth, the importance of the chart above is the green "other". The "other" accounted for last of the growth pre-recession as the housing market stumbled and while we have seen a recovery (i.e. the "other" is no longer a drag), it accounted for a minuscule amount of growth in the latest quarter.
The million dollar question is 'can the economy grow on its own in coming quarters?'. While the stimulus (homeowner tax credit) and inventory restocking (which I suspect will only get bigger) should allow the economy to grow well through this year, the impact of both will likely be reduced going into Q1 of next year.
My guess, is that all the taxpayer money that was (wasted?) used to pull demand into Q3 from future quarters, was done so with the hope of kick-starting the consumer in a manner that used to be done through Fed interest rate cuts. That worked in the past when consumers needed a nudge, but what if the answer is not for the US consumer to power the world's growth, but to rebuild and invest (i.e. save) for the future.
Source: BEA
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Source: http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2009/10/what-now.html
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- Where's the Shout Out?
- What Now?
- Personal Income and Outlays Under Pressure
- Thank You Cash for Clunkers
- Q3 GDP: Subsidized Consumption Edition
- Durable Goods and GDP
- Consumer (Lack of) Confidence
- Case Shiller Surge in Perspective
- More on Existing Home Sales
- The Death of the Newspaper
- Dallas Manufacturing Turns Down
- On the Relationship Between High Yield and Equities
- Business Loans Record Freefall
- Non-Manufacturing Layoffs Continue to Rise
- Existing Home Sales... Not as Strong as You May Think
- Eurozone Industrial Production: Strong, but Split
- UK Economy Continues to Contract
- The Politics of Global Warming
- U.S. Fighting While We We're Down: Productivity Ed...
- Strong, But "Flaky" Leading Economic Indicators
- What if the U.S. is Unable to Power the Global Rec...
- State by State Unemployment: Nowhere to Hide
- Producer Prices Surprise to the Downside
- Commercial Real Estate Fiasco
- The Rich Get Richer: Median Wage Edition
- On the Attractiveness of Treasuries
- Consumer Sentiment Sluggish
- Japanese Tertiary Index Shows Strength
- Output Gap and Inflation
- Philly Fed Shows Strength, But Less
- Inflation Cools Off? No Inflation to Begin With
- Empire Manufacturing Index Roars
- Good News Alert: Inventories Cliff Dive
- Retail Sales Show Relative Strength
- UK Weakness and Disinflation
- Renting vs. Owning
- Consumer Credit: Supply vs. Demand
- German Investor Confidence Slightly Lower
- Costs of Employment Up... Just Not in Wage Form
- The Legacy of Bill Miller
- The Legacy of Bill Miller
- 10.9 Persons Unemployed per Job Opening
- The Dangers of Non-Seasonal Data
- Trade Balance Breakdown
- Same Store Sales Rebound.... To 2005 Levels
- Is the Long Awaited Inventory Correction About to ...
- Consumer Credit Crumbles
- Hedge Funds: Up, Up, and Away
- U.K. Production Slumps to 1992 Levels
- Aussie Miracle Results in Rate Hike
- TARP Turns One
- ISM Services Show Signs of Expansion
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- Saddled with Debt
- Wealthiest Americans Rebounding
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- Hours Worked per Person Tailspin Continues
- Broader Unemployment to 17%
- Japan's Odd Labor Report
- Manufacturing Continues to Expand
- Consumption Up in August, Expect a Decline in Sept...
- It's All About the Yield
- IMF Sees Stronger Global Growth
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