It has been a cheerful couple of days
for those starved of bright economic news. Hopeful
statistics have been trickling in from many parts of the
world. On Friday May 29th revised first quarter GDP
figures for America showed that the economy there had
contracted slightly less than had earlier been reported.
In addition durable-goods orders in the country rose by
the most in 16 months. In Japan, factory output rose by
5.2 per cent in April, the biggest monthly increase, in
percentage terms, in over half a century. And in the
first quarter India's economy grew by a bullish 5.8 per
cent, compared with a year before, while South Korea's
industrial production continued to rise in April.
Even in gloomy Europe there are
encouraging signs. Poland's GDP ticked up by 0.8 per
cent in the first quarter, as did German private
consumption (in the same period) and retail sales also
grew, by 0.5 per cent, in April. British consumer
confidence remained steady in April, and house prices
there rose both in March and May, according to one
index.
For optimists, these are all signs
that might point towards the beginning of the end of the
"Great Recession". Headline writers, and those
who are urging stockmarkets to continue rising, will
continue to talk of hopes of recovery. Yet a closer look
at the detail of the latest figures suggests that hope
springs eternal and will latch on to what it can--even
when a more sober analysis would suggest there is a long
way to go before recovery sets in.
Optimists make much of statistics
that beat analysts' expectations. But when a particular
figure outdoes predictions it may be because those
expectations were overly pessimistic, rather than a sign
that something fundamental has changed for the better.
What, for instance, is the right
reference point on the latest news on India's economy?
Doomsters might fret that it has grown at the slowest
quarterly pace in several years. Cheerleaders could
rejoice that it has expanded slightly faster than most
people had expected. Weary of negative news, the latter
explanation is a tempting way to make sense of the
numbers, but the gloomy view is equally valid.
Thus pessimists, who are unconvinced
that the worst is over for the world economy, have much
to reinforce their dark mood. One particular concern is
that the financial and credit problems at the root of
the global recession have not been dealt with
satisfactorily. Keiichiro Kobayashi, a Japanese
economist, has looked back to Japan's experience in the
late 1990s and argues that unless the banks are fixed, a
strong recovery for the world economy is impossible.
Some disagree, suggesting that economic output can
bounce back even before credit and financial markets are
again healthy, if consumers get their wallets open. But
even if this argument is compelling in some historical
cases, this time it seems that household spending in
many economies will remain weak because of high levels
of debt.
One man who has made his name in
recent years as a doom-monger, Nouriel Roubini, an
economist at New York University, recently suggested
that recovery from recession was far from imminent,
arguing that "it's going to last another six to
nine months". It might not be surprising that he
avoids a bullish prediction, but Mr Roubini goes one
step further, noting that other economists are still
suggesting a "doomsday" scenario, with
continuing contraction for a long time to come, and thus
even he could be considered as an optimist.
--Source- Economist