Feldstein Says Recession Odds More Than 50% on Jobs (Update2)
By Steve Matthews
Jan. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Harvard University economist Martin
Feldstein, head of the group that dates U.S. economic cycles,
said the odds of a recession have risen to more than 50 percent
after a report showing unemployment jumped in December.
``We are now talking about more likely than not,''
Feldstein, president of the National Bureau of Economic
Research, said in an interview in New Orleans two days ago. ``I
have been saying about 50 percent. This now pushes it up a bit
above that.''
The jobless rate rose to 5 percent in December, the highest
in two years, from 4.7 percent in November, a government report
showed last week. Payrolls rose by 18,000, the least since
August 2003.
The U.S. economic expansion is cooling after a third-
quarter surge as the housing slump enters its third year and
consumer spending slows. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan and ex-Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers are among
those raising the prospect of a recession.
The increase in unemployment will hurt consumer confidence,
Feldstein said in the interview. He was in New Orleans to speak
at an economics panel discussion on productivity that was part
of the annual meeting of the Allied Social Science Associations.
``Consumers, with essentially no growth in jobs in
December, are going to be more nervous about the future,'' said
Feldstein, 68. ``They are going to be a little more reluctant to
spend, and that is going to put a further drag on growth in
2008.''
Growth to Slow
The U.S. economy, the world's largest, grew at a 1 percent
pace in the fourth quarter after expanding at a 4.9 percent rate
the previous three months, according to the median estimate of
economists surveyed by Bloomberg News last month. Growth for all
of 2008 is projected at 2.3 percent.
The economy is heading for ``one of the worst recessions
we've had in a while,'' investor Jim Rogers said in a Bloomberg
Television interview today from Singapore. He said investors
should sell the dollar as global currencies weaken.
The Federal Reserve has cut its main interest rate three
times since Sept. 18, to 4.25 percent from 5.25 percent. The
next meeting is on Jan. 29-30.
``They have to keep lowering rates,'' Feldstein said. A
reduction of half a percentage point in the federal funds rate,
which banks charge each other for overnight loans, would ``not
be a bad thing at this point.''
Fiscal Stimulus
Rate cuts alone may not be enough to keep the economy
growing, Feldstein said. He said Congress may have to cut taxes
to stoke consumer spending and restore confidence.
``I am not sure that reduction in rates is going to have as
much traction as it did in the past because so much of the
problems now are problems of confidence in the financial sector
and of bank capital,'' he said. ``So that is why I have been
saying we need some kind of a fiscal stimulus.''
Housing starts fell 3.7 percent in November from October
and were 48 percent below their January 2006 peak, according to
a Commerce Department report last month.
``Housing starts have collapsed, so you have low
construction, low household wealth and that is now beginning to
accumulate and to shift over into reductions in the growth of
employment and therefore in the growth of incomes,'' Feldstein
said.
`Nowhere Near' Recession
The bureau's Business Cycle Dating Committee isn't close to
meeting to decide whether a recession has started, said Robert
Hall, an economist at Stanford University who leads the panel.
``The committee operates retrospectively,'' Hall said in an
e-mail response to a question about the committee's plans. ``As
a general matter, we don't meet until it is reasonably clear
that a downturn has occurred,'' he said. ``We are nowhere near
that point today.''
Economists at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. say more
evidence is needed before they can say whether the U.S. economy
is contracting.
``Recession talk seems premature,'' said Lehman Chief
Global Fixed-Income Strategist Jack Malvey and Chief U.S.
Economist Ethan Harris in a note. ``Confirmation still requires
additional data, in particular December retail sales, out in
mid-January.''
At the same time, ``odds of outright recession certainly
have increased'' and a ```recession spell' at some juncture over
the next two years should hardly surprise markets,'' they said.
Feldstein has headed the NBER, which like Harvard is based
in Cambridge, Massachusetts, since 1984. He also served in the
post from 1977 to 1982. Feldstein plans to step down from the
NBER in June to conduct more research on his own, his assistant,
Norma McEvoy, said in September.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Steve Matthews in New Orleans at
smatthews@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: January 7, 2008 07:42 EST