The United States Will Be Just Fine
Written by Brian Hamilton MBA   
Thursday, 05 March 2009 00:00

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There is probably something in humans and in every generation that makes us think that the problems we face are uniquely difficult.  Much has been written about the economy and, if you accept certain assumptions from what you read, you might think that we are in the midst of a global depression.  Yet, it is important to put the current economy in perspective.  We might even try reviewing and analyzing some objective data.

Last quarter, GDP fell at a rate of 0.5 percent, which means that the total value of goods and services produced in the US fell by a half of one percentage point last quarter over the previous quarter1.  For the first two quarters of this year, GDP grew by 0.9 percent and 2.8 percent, indicating that economic growth is relatively flat this year, but that it is not falling off a cliff.  This isn’t the first time GDP has fallen and it won’t be the last.  A decrease in GDP after almost 6 years of increases is not positive, but almost predictable.  No economy grows indefinitely and consistently; there are always temporary lapses.  In fact, if you consider the media coverage of the economy over the past year and the consequent way people have been scared, it is remarkable that anyone is buying anything.

Some would say that we cannot only look at GDP, so let’s look at other factors.  Interest rates remain at historically low levels2.  This means that if you want to borrow money, you can borrow money inexpensively as a business or as a person.  Loan volume in the country, according to the FDIC and contrary to what you read about the credit crisis, actually increased last quarter compared to the same quarter last year3.   Someone is getting loans and they are not paying excessive interest rates for them.  

How about employment?  According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment sits at 6.7 percent.  At this time last year, unemployment was 4.7 percent.  The decrease in employment is not favorable, but historically an unemployment rate of 6.7 percent is not close to devastating.  The 50-year historical rate of unemployment is 5.97 percent4.  Most economists agree that the natural rate of unemployment, which is the lowest rate due to the fact that people change jobs or are between jobs, is around 4 percent.  So, today we sit at 2.7 percent above that rate.  Once again, the very recent trend is not good but it is certainly not horrifying.  I have noticed many recent media references to the Great Depression (the period of time between late 1929 and around 1938 or so, depending upon the definitions used and personal inclinations).  It might be illuminating to note that by 1933, during the height of the Depression, the unemployment rate was 24.9 percent.  During that same time period, GDP was falling dramatically, which created a devastating impact on the country.  Americans have good hearts and empathize (as they should) with those who are unemployed, yet it would be easy to go too far in our assumptions on how the working population is currently affected in aggregate.  If 6 percent of the people are unemployed, approximately 94 percent of the people are working.  We should always shoot for full employment, but why would we view our efforts as poor when we don’t quite make that mark?  A good student might try to get straight A’s, but getting an occasional “B” or “C” won’t end the world. 

Look at personal income today.  Personal income is income received by individuals from all sources, including employers and the government.  Personal income rose last quarter compared to a year ago according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.  Compared to five years ago, personal income has risen by 32.1 percent5.  Even considering that inflation was 18.13 percent over this period, people are generally making more money than they used to.  This is another one of those statistics that can easily get bent to fit a story.  You often hear things like “personal income fell last month by 23 percent”, but writers tend to leave larger and more important statistics out.  In this case, wouldn’t you be more interested in trends over a quarter or a year?  Using isolated statistics to fit your view is something that has become accepted and rarely challenged.

Next, there is inflation.  The inflation rate measures the strength of the dollar you hold today as compared to a year ago.  The inflation rate is currently 3.66 percent.  Over the past 50 years, the inflation rate has averaged about 4.2 percent6.  Inflation remains well within control.  Yet, would you be surprised to read a story next month citing an X-percent jump in inflation over the last day, month?  I wouldn’t be.  (Ironically, the one thing about the economy that is alarming from a historical standpoint is our national debt, which gets some but not enough media coverage.  We now owe $10.6 trillion and have become a debtor nation over the past several decades.  We now depend on the goodwill and investments of outside countries, while we continue to spend more than we make). 

Now, the skeptics reading this will undoudebtly point to other (I believe, far lesser) statistics that validate their gloomy view of the economy and the direction of the country.  I ask the reader:  if people are employed, are making good wages, can borrow inexpensively, hold a dollar that is worth largely what it was worth a year or five years ago, and live in a country where the value of goods and services is rising, tell me exactly where the crisis is? There is no doubt that the economy has slowed, but slowness does not equal death.  It is true that the financial markets are a mess (and the depreciation of the value of equities is both scary and bad), but analysts typically go too far in ascribing the fall of the financial markets with the fall of a whole economy.   The markets are an important component of the economy, but the markets are not the totality of the economy.  No one can say whether conditions will worsen in the future.  However, we have learned that the United States economy has been tremendously resilient over the past 200 years and will probably remain so, as long as the structural philosophies that it has been built upon are left intact.   Americans are hard-working and innovative people and the country will be just fine.

1 “Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product.” Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Department of Commerce.  Updated 25 November 2008. www.bea.gov.
2  Monthly Federal Funds Rates. The Federal Reserve.  http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/data/monthly.
3  “Statistics at a Glance” (Third Quarter 2008 & 2007 Statistics).  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Updated 30 September 2008. http://www.fdic.gov/bank/statistical/stats/2008sep/industry.html
4  “Employment status of the civilian noninstitutional population 16 years and over, 1942 to date.” Bureau of Labor Statistics.  ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/lf/aat1.txt.

5 “Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income” (Table 1.7.5). Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Department of Commerce. Updated 25 November 2008. http://www.bea.gov/national/nipaweb/TableView.asp?SelectedTable=43&Freq=Qtr&FirstYear=2006&LastYear=2008
6  “Historical Inflation Data from 1914 to the Present.” InflationData.com, based on the Consumer Price Index (http://www.bls.gov/CPI).  http://inflationdata.com/inflation/Inflation_Rate/HistoricalInflation.aspx.


Brian Hamilton MBA
About the author:

Brian Hamilton is the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Sageworks, where he manages overall strategy and product development. He is an original co-developer of  “FIND” (Financial Information into Narrative Data), the company's core artificial intelligence technology which converts financial numbers into plain-language reports. “FIND” is the basis of profitCents® and Sageworks Analyst®, applications that are used today by thousands of financial institutions and accounting firms throughout North America and the United Kingdom.

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