| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 European
 International
 
 Analysis/Comment

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

Analysis/Comment Last Updated: Sep 10, 2009 - 6:56:03 AM


Dr. Peter Morici: US trade deficit threatens “W” shaped recovery, destroys jobs
By Professor Peter Morici
Sep 10, 2009 - 1:24:38 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland. He is a recognized expert on international economics, industrial policy and macroeconomics. Prior to joining the university, he served as director of the Office of Economics at the US International Trade Commission during the Clinton Administration.

Dr. Peter Morici: Today, the US Commerce Department will report July international trade in goods and services. The trade deficit, which is the amount imports exceed exports, is expected to rise to $28.0 billion from $27.0 billion in May.

The trade deficit was a principal cause of the Great Recession, threatens to stifle recovery and push unemployment above 10 percent through 2011.

At 2.3 percent of GDP, the trade deficit subtracts more from the demand for US-made goods and services than President Obama’s stimulus package adds. Moreover, Obama’s stimulus is temporary, whereas the trade deficit is permanent.

Subsidized manufactures from China and petroleum account for nearly the entire deficit, and both will rise as consumer spending and oil prices rebound later in 2009.

Money spent on Chinese coffee makers and Middle East oil cannot be spent on US-made goods and services, unless offset by exports.

When imports substantially exceed exports, Americans must consume much more than the incomes they earn producing goods and services, or the demand for what they make is inadequate, inventories pile up, layoffs result, and the economy goes into recession.


From 2003 to 2007, Americans borrowed to consume more than they produced but when mortgages failed, the shortfall in demand for domestic products drove up unemployment, choked consumer spending and thrust the economy into recession. Now huge stimulus spending is required to resuscitate business activity.

President Obama ignores the trade deficit; consequently, his policies to fight the recession will deliver only a moderate recovery in 2010. Imports of oil and Chinese consumer goods will rise as the economy recovers. As stimulus spending runs out, the escalating trade deficit will push the economy down again and threatens the feared “W” shaped recovery.

So far, the Obama Administration has not challenged Beijing’s most protectionist policies—large government purchases of U.S. dollars that drive down the exchange rate for the yuan, subsidize Chinese exports, and artificially elevate Chinese savings and suppress U.S. savings. The China-US savings imbalance is not entirely a natural phenomenon rooted in consumer behavior.

In 2009 the trade deficit is slicing $400 billion to $600 billion off GDP, and longer term, it reduces potential annual GDP growth to 3 percent from 4 percent.

Manufacturers are particularly hard hit by subsidized imports. Through recession and recovery, 5.5 million manufacturing jobs have been lost since 2000. Following the pattern of past economic expansions, the manufacturing sector should have regained about 2.7 million of those jobs, especially given the very strong productivity growth accomplished in recent years.

The trade deficit is the single most important reason why the private sector has failed to add a single job since 1999.

Thanks to the record trade deficits accumulated over the last 10 years, the US economy is about $1.5 trillion smaller. This comes to about $10,000 per worker.

Peter Morici,

Professor, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland,

College Park, MD 20742-1815,

703 549 4338 Phone

703 618 4338 Cell Phone

pmorici@rhsmith.umd.edu

http://www.smith.umd.edu/lbpp/faculty/morici.html

http://www.smith.umd.edu/faculty/pmorici/cv_pmorici.htm

Related Articles


© Copyright 2009 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

Analysis/Comment
Latest Headlines
Ireland and leadership at a time of crisis
IDA Ireland Horizon 2020 Strategy: Lack of coherence on changes facing existing Irish-based multinationals/ challenges of adapting model for China and India - - Prof. Seamus Grimes
Dr. Peter Morici: US trade deficit threatens a second recession
Irish Economy: Political spin, jobs and IDA Ireland
Dr. Peter Morici: US health care and broken government
Ryanair, the Dublin Airport hangar, jobs and a media campaign
Irish reform, boring "process" and the insiders who call themselves outsiders
Building an indigenous Irish exporting base; Being prepared for a hard slog and the sheltered workshop that is RTÉ
George Lee and the job he hated
Cowen makes another “rallying cry”; Court appointed examiner seeks €425-an-hour; 18 State agencies fund 4,000 non-staff flights in 2 years
Dr. Peter Morici: Friday’s US jobs report
Dr. Peter Morici: Mr. President; It’s the trade deficit stupid!
Ireland's Choice: Reform or risking status as a failed rich State
Ireland: Where the buck stops nowhere - - Irish banking inquiry, DCC and a cast of Pontius Pilates
Irish Economy: Economists announce new dawn; "Kickstarting" growth from behind a desk! ECB director terms them delusionists
Irish Property Crash:  "Thank God, I'm not still a chartered accountant"
Dr. Peter Morici: President Obama's Bank Tax: Just another bit of demagoguery
The euro, Ireland and the quest for instant competitiveness
Dr. Peter Morici: Wall Street rakes big bonuses, Obama fails to stem abuse
Wall Street's Accountability Deficit: "Money is like sea water. The more you drink, the thirstier you become"