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Economic data look mild, but feeling is gloomy

Disappearing jobs, tumbling home prices suggest recession is here

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  Slowdown or recession?
May 6: There’s no debate the economy has slowed sharply, but some forecasters think things could begin improving later this year. CNBC talked to Martin Feldstein, head of the National Bureau of Economic Research for his view.

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  Market update
Quotes delayed 15+ min.
By John W. Schoen
Senior producer
msnbc.com
updated 1:28 p.m. ET May 8, 2008

John W. Schoen
Senior producer

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House prices are falling, food and energy prices are rising and consumers are gloomier than they’ve been in decades. But the latest data on the U.S. economy shows it still has a feeble pulse.

So which is it? Are we in the early stages of a full-blown recession? Or is this a brief downturn before the economy gets up another head of steam later in the year?

Though the start of a recession can only be seen in the rear-view mirror, many economists now believe the U.S. economy is close to recession or in one. That’s based largely on a string of monthly reports showing the economy has lost about 260,000 jobs so far this year.

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“Since the 1950s we've never had a period of four months of job losses without that signaling that we were in a recession,” said Jared Bernstein, senior economist of the Economic Policy Institute. “If and when (a recession is confirmed), it will probably be dated based on these payroll numbers as starting sometime around December or January.”

But other economic signals are flashing yellow, not red. The government recently reported the gross domestic product grew slightly in the first quarter, while generally GDP shrinks in a recession. Last week's employment report for April showed the economy lost only 20,000 jobs, fewer than in previous months.

On Thursday, retailers reported better-than-expected sales for April. But most of those gains came from discounters and wholesale clubs, a sign that consumers are tightening their budgets.

Part of the puzzle may rest in the data itself. Monthly jobs data can be volatile, especially when hiring is slowing. The GDP data represents the economy's average performance in the quarter and is subject to revision in coming months.

“If you compare where the economy was at the end of March with where we were at the beginning of the year, there is no question the economy is down by just about every measure,” said Martin Feldstein, the former chief economic adviser to Ronald Reagan who now heads the National Bureau of Economic Research, which formally "declares" U.S. recessions.

Even without the confirmation of a down quarter, about half of the economists polled last month by the Blue Chip Economic Indicators survey said they believe the U.S. economy has already slipped into recession or will do so this year.
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  How’s the economy doing?
May 8: CNBC’s Erin Burnett and MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough discuss the current state of the U.S. economy.

Morning Joe



The majority said they don’t expect the downturn to be especially deep or last very long. The consensus forecast calls for the GDP to eke out a 0.1 percent advance in each of the first two quarters of this year before picking up speed in the second half and ending the year with modest 1.4 percent growth. That is down from earlier consensus forecasts of 1.5 percent in March and 2.6 percent last September, when the Federal Reserve first began to cut interest rates.

That’s not the view of Americans consumers, most of whom see the economic glass as less than half full, according to the latest survey of consumer sentiment. Americans are gloomier about the economy than at any time since the early 1980s, when the economy was emerging from a decade of weak economic growth and rampant inflation. Nearly nine in 10 consumers think the economy is in recession, according to the Reuters/University of Michigan survey.

Some economists are at a loss to explain that level of pessimism given that, so far, the data indicate the economy isn't in such bad shape.

“While there’s no question the economy is struggling, just how anyone could confuse the current environment with the worst economy since the Great Depression is baffling to say the least,” said Wachovia chief economist John Silvia.

The answer to that riddle may be that consumers see trouble ahead that the data isn’t picking up yet. The big worry is that falling house prices will continue to chew up the home equity that has become the main financial asset for many Americans.

Feldstein notes that home prices have fallen 13 percent in the past year and have been falling at a 25 percent rate over the past three months, leaving more than 8 million homeowners stuck with mortgages that are bigger than their house is worth. Many of them are tempted to simply walk away and mail the keys to their lenders.

“If we see a big increase in defaults, and ultimately in foreclosures, that's going to, I think, push us definitely into a significant recession," Feldstein said.


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