Robert Reich warns a recession, or worse, could be coming.
Think the last few days have been bad for Wall Street and the rest of
the world's markets? Hang on, things are probably going to get worse,
says Robert Reich, President Clinton's former secretary of Labor and
author of the recent book "Supercapitalism: The Transformation of
Business, Democracy and Everyday Life." According to Reich, who
currently teaches public policy at the University of California,
Berkeley, the United States might even be headed toward a depression.
NEWSWEEK's Arlyn Tobias Gajilan talked to Reich about the Fed's
surprise rate cut Wednesday, the "D word," the growing criticism of
Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke and whether a stimulus package
will include $500 check for each American. Excerpts:
NEWSWEEK: Many investors had hoped for an interest-rate cut, but this
cut's size and timing took people by surprise. Were you taken aback by
the Fed's three-quarter basis-point cut, the largest single-day
reduction in the Fed's history? And do you think it's necessary?
Robert Reich: Yes and yes. The Fed is clearly becoming aware of the
serious potential of an economic meltdown. The size of the cut is
larger than anyone expected because the Fed usually moves in
[increments of] .25 or .50 percentage points. But the danger of a cut
this size is that it may panic the investors. They may conclude that
the Fed has determined that the economy is even worse than assumed and
that there is still a way to go before we hit bottom. Yet the Fed has
to [cut]. Credit markets are still uncomfortably frozen, and the
housing slump continues to worsen.
Unlike Ben Bernanke , Alan Greenspan had a habit of hinting at what
his next move would be. While he kept investors on their toes,
Greenspan rarely acted as unexpectedly as Bernanke did this week. Is it
dangerous for a Fed chairman to surprise the market?
Yes, but I don't believe Bernanke wants to surprise the market as a
general rule. This strikes me as a major exception to the relative
transparency he's trying to achieve with regard to letting the market
know where the Fed is going. It's a move that underscores the
seriousness of the current economic problems.
Tuesday's rate cut initially caused a huge market swing, with the Dow,
NASDAQ and the S&P 500 all hitting 14-, 15- and 16-month lows
respectively. But by the end of the day, all three had bounced back
considerably. Does that mean the cut is working?
The fact is that no one knows anything. Investors are flying blind.
Even experienced Wall Street hands have no idea whether we're near the
bottom. We can expect even more violent swings in the stock market. The
reason for all the uncertainty is that the big banks and lenders simply
have no idea how many bad loans they're holding. [During the housing
bubble] credit markets evolved such complex ways of reselling and
repackaging debt that even many top Wall Street professionals simply
have no idea of the risks and costs they're involved with. The bottom
line is there is a great deal of uncertainty out there, and the markets
hate uncertainty.
Can we expect another rate cut at the Fed meeting next week?
Yes. I wouldn't be surprised if the Fed cut another quarter point. If
it doesn't announce something at its meeting, it may cut .25 or even
.50 within the next month or so. They are clearly worried. [And while
lowering rates may cause] inflation, it is far less threatening now
than a recession or perhaps--and I cringe at using the word--a
depression.
You cringe, but you still used the D word. How far along are we on that
particularly slippery slope?
Hopefully, not far. But several managing directors on the Street, whose
opinions I trust, have said to me that the chances for a depression are
20 percent. That matches my sense. In other words, it's still low, but
20 percent is nonetheless far higher a probability than anyone should
be comfortable with. Even absent a depression, it seems likely that the
coming recession will be deeper than the last several.
There's a U.S. News & World Report blog item that was making the
rounds on the NYSE floor Wednesday reporting that Bernanke has
privately been much more negative about the economy than he publicly
admits. From the indicators you've been watching, how bad do you think
things are really going to get in the next six months to a year? Is a
recession avoidable at this point?
It's going to be difficult to avoid a recession, defined as two
consecutive quarters of economic contraction. Difficult because the
scale of the problems is so much larger than any stimulus package or
Fed rate cut can readily deal with. The stimulus package now being
considered on the Hill is in the range of $140 [billion] to $150
billion. But at the rate housing prices are dropping, consumer
purchases are likely to be hit by $360 [billion] to $400 billion.
Similarly the Fed rate cuts, under normal circumstances, would free up
money, but lenders are afraid of lending because they don't know how
much risk of default they face, even at lower interest rates. It's a
little like offering a lobster dinner to someone who is so constipated
that they can't take in another mouthful.
Bernanke hasn't won many fans lately. Under his leadership, many on the
Street think the Fed has moved too slowly to avoid recession and too
ineffectively to prevent inflation. Is that fair criticism?
Probably not. Up until last week, Wall Street's assessment of Bernanke
was quite positive. He was getting good press all around. He faces a
very difficult balancing act under circumstances in which energy and
food prices are rising, the dollar is falling and inflation is becoming
more threatening. What should the Fed do? It is terribly unqualified to
cope with speculative bubbles and their aftereffects. The housing
bubble and the Wild West credit markets of the last few years came
about not because the Fed kept interest rates too low, but because the
treasury, the comptroller of the currency, and the Fed, in its
regulatory capacity, failed miserably to use their authority to oversee
credit markets and assure that they were not unduly exploiting those
low interest rates with irresponsible lending practices. Now we have a
mess on our hands. Bernanke has the only pooper-scooper in town, but it
is too small for the job.
There's a theory that the global markets have matured past the point
where they won't necessarily get slammed whenever the U.S. economy gets
hammered. Do you buy into that thinking? Will our country's worsening
economic situation infect the rest of the world economy?
The U.S. is not completely uncoupled from the rest of the global
economy, but the good news is that consumers in Japan, China, India and
Europe are now far better able to fill-in the gap when American
consumers fail to do the job they have been doing for decades, which is
to buy enough of the world's goods and services to keep the world out
of recession. Remember American consumers have been the Energizer
Bunnies of the global economy for some time. Now others around the
world are wealthy enough to become Energizer Bunnies themselves.
The administration has called for a $140 billion economic stimulus
package. There have been few details about the plan, but Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson and Congress have all hinted that taxpayers
might soon receive checks of several hundred dollars or more. Can
Americans expect those checks any time soon and will such a plan
actually stimulate the economy?
Only relatively low-income people are likely to spend any extra money
they get, since they need the extra money in order to maintain their
living standards. So the first questions is will the stimulus be
targeted to them or will it be frittered away in tax breaks for the
upper-middle class and for investors. Secondly, the money has to be in
people's pockets right away, not eight or nine months from now in the
form of a tax rebate from the IRS. The only surefire way to do that is
to reduce withholding in payroll taxes, since 80 percent of Americans
pay more in payroll tax than they do in income tax. Thirdly, the money
has to be enough to change people's behavior. Five hundred dollars
isn't likely to do the trick. I see far more politics in this than
economics. Washington has to look like it's doing something, and so it
will.
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