Ireland falls back into recession despite multibillion-euro austerity drive

Classic headline!!!!

Ireland falls back into recession despite multibillion-euro austerity drive

By Henry McDonald

June 27 (Guardian) — Ireland is back in recession for the first time since its 2010 bailout, official figures have confirmed.

Irish GDP shrank 0.6% in the first quarter of 2013, but the recession was confirmed when official data revised down the economy’s performance in the final three months of 2012 to a decline of 0.2%. It means that Ireland has endured three successive quarters of contraction, despite the presence in Ireland of multinationals such as Apple, Google, IBM and several big pharmaceutical companies.

The blow comes as Ireland reels from the unfolding Anglo Irish Bank scandal, in which executives at the bailed-out bank were caught on tape joking about their multi-billion euro rescue in 2008 and, at one point, singing “Deutschland über Alles” as they quipped about German deposits shoring up the bank.

The output drop reflects an ongoing depression in consumer demand, amid unemployment of nearly 14%. Personal expenditure declined by 3% between the fourth quarter of 2012 and the first quarter of 2013. The decrease in demand reflects Irish consumers’ fears for their jobs and a reluctance to get into debt following the credit-fuelled spending boom of the Celtic Tiger years. Exports fell by 3.2% in the first quarter, in a stark reversal for an economy that had enjoyed an export-led recovery.

The slip back into recession will be deeply disappointing for the Fine Gael-Labour coalition, which has slashed public spending in a bid to drive down the country’s debt while placating the troika of the International Monetary Fund, European Union and European Central Bank who bailed out the country in 2010. Ireland’s deputy prime minister, Eamon Gilmore, admitted this week that the Anglo Irish revelations could harm attempts to win further debt relief from the European Union.

On a brighter note, the construction industry in the Republic is showing some signs of recovery. The latest figures point to a 2.1% increase in building across the state in a sector which was devastated by the property crash of 2008-09, and which has been a huge factor in lengthening the country’s dole queues.

Carney quotes me again

The Real Reason 1Q GDP Took a Hit

By John Carney

June 26 (CNBC) — The economy grew more sluggishly in the first three months of the year than the government first reported, as higher taxes on payrolls dampened consumer spending and held overall growth down to just a 1.8 percent annual rate.

Make no mistake about it: this is really grim. And to make matters worse, it’s something we did to ourselves.

The Commerce Department had earlier estimated growth at 2.4 percent. Most economists expected that number to remain when the final revision came out Wednesday.

This follows an expansion of just 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter of last year.

The biggest source of the downward revision came from consumer spending. Government economists had estimated that consumer services consumption (excluding housing and utilities) would grow by 2.5 percent, instead it grew at just 0.7 percent.

That’s stall speed for consumers. Far worse, in fact, than the 2.4 percent growth seen in the fourth quarter.

There were also downward revisions to nonresidential structures investment, equipment and software spending, and the change in inventories. Government spending shrunk by slightly less than expected, so the sequester spending cuts weren’t as big of a deal as some predicted. Residential investment was up by far more than expected, 14.0 percent.

The main culprit behind the consumer pullback seems to be what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke calls “fiscal headwinds.” Specifically, the end of the payroll tax holiday left less money in the hands of consumers to spend. We taxed ourselves out of growth.

“The lower consumption estimate provides some indication that the impact from fiscal austerity may have been more than previously thought, and that the economy started the year on weaker footing than previous estimated,” TD Securities analyst Millan Mulraine wrote in a note.

But don’t entirely discount the federal spending cuts known as “sequester,” which kicked in on March 1. Even though the sequester did not directly diminish government spending by as much as possible, its anticipated effects may have dampened investments.

Gross private investment was revised down to 7.4 percent growth from the estimate of 9.0 percent. Commercial investment fell 8.3 percent, compared with an estimated fall of just 3.5 percent. Business investment was revised down slightly lower to 4.1 percent from 4.6 percent. Those drops likely reflect a projected weakness in the economy going forward.

That growth could fall so low in a quarter in which the Federal Reserve was engaging in a new round of quantitative easing, buying $85 billion of bonds each month, might cast doubt on the effectiveness of the program. That would be bad news for stocks, which rose for the first four months of the year on the idea that QE could prop up a weak economy. (And have recently fallen after the Fed began to explain when it would pare back the program.)

“‘QE on’ was a misguided speculative bubble in any case, as QE is, at best, a placebo, and in fact somewhat of a tax as it removes a bit of interest income,” bond investor Warren Mosler said.

Mosler is a long-term critic of QE. He believes that because the interest paid on bonds the Fed buys under the program gets paid to the Fed instead of private bond holders, it acts as a tax on the private sector. The economic benefits are illusory, according to Mosler.

On the other hand, sluggishness in the economy could mean that expectations about the Fed tapering QE and raising rates get pushed back. Bernanke has stressed that decisions about policy changes would be dependent on economic data.

Wednesday’s news about the first quarter, while backward looking, certainly casts doubt on whether the economy is strong enough to justify lower levels of bond purchases.

Not everyone buys that way of thinking, however. Some doubt that Wednesday’s news will have any effect on the Fed’s plan to reduce the bond-buying program.

“The Fed will presumably continue to maintain its primary focus on labor market data, so while this revision obviously will impact their thoughts at the margin, I highly doubt that it will be a game changer, especially since I am skeptical that policymakers are as data-dependent as they want to believe,” Stephen Stanley of Pierpont Securities wrote in a note Wednesday morning.

Friday update- deficits matter, a lot!

So back to basics

For 16t in output to get sold there must have been 16t in spending, which also translates into 16t in some agent’s income.

And (apart from unsold inventory growth), for all practical purposes nominal GDP growth is another way to say sales growth.

To state the obvious, sales = spending, income = expense, etc. Working against growth is ‘unspent income’, also called ‘demand leakages’. Those include pension contributions, insurance reserves, retained earnings, foreign CB fx purchases, cash hoards, etc. etc. etc. And for every agent that spent less than his income, some other agent spent more than his income, to the tune of the 16t GDP.

And GDP growth is a function of that much more of same.

Well, the 2% or so growth we’ve been getting once included the govt spending maybe 10% more than its income to keep sales growing more than the demand leakages were working against sales growth. And with growth, the so called automatic fiscal STABILIZERS work to temper that growth, as growth causes govt revenues to increase and govt transfer payments to decline.

You can think of this as institutional structure that causes the economy to have to go uphill to grow. That’s because as the economy grows, the growth of govt net spending is ‘automatically’ reduced.

So after a couple of years growth the govt went from spending maybe 10% more than its income to something under 6% of its income, which translated into about 2% real growth, and about 3.5% nominal growth.

Well, to keep this going in the face of the demand leakages, some other agents were picking up the slack.

Looking at the charts it seems to me it was the home buyers and car buyers who were consistently spending more than their incomes, driving the nominal GDP growth.

But then on Jan 1 fica taxes went up as did some income tax rates, by about 3.5 billion/week, removing that much income from potential spenders. And a few months later the sequesters hit, both reducing GDP by the amount of those spending cuts and reducing income by about another 1.5 billion per week.

In other words, the govt suddenly reduced the amount it was spending beyond its income by about 1.5% of GDP, which had been working along with the domestic credit expansion to outpace the demand leakages.

So how has domestic credit managed to expand to fill that spending gap caused by the already retreating govt deficit spending proactively dropping another 1.5%?

With great difficulty!

Since January, after climbing steadily, car sales look to have gone sideways. And looks to me like the rate of domestic deficit spending on housing has declined as well. In any case there hasn’t been an the increase these ‘credit expansion engines’ needed to fill the spending gap from the proactive drop in govt deficit spending. And add to that decelerating person income stats (and remember, the pay for additional jobs comes from someone else’s income, and hopefully income spent on output).

And in any case to keep growing at about 2% credit expansion has to overcome the demand leakages and climb the hill of the automatic fiscal stabilizers as with the current institutional structure nominal growth automatically reduces the contribution of govt deficit spending, which is now maybe down to 4% of GDP. Note that with forecasts of 2% growth the forecast for the govt deficit spending falls to only 2% of GDP, implying far more rapid increases of ‘borrowing to spend’ in the domestic sector. And if that net new borrowing doesn’t materialize, the sales don’t either.

Is it possible for housing related credit expansion to suddenly accelerate? Sure, but is it likely, especially in the face of the drag the govt layoffs and tax increases that made the hill the domestic credit expansion needs to climb that much steeper? And sure, the foreign sector could suddenly spend that much more of its income in the US, but is a US export boom likely in the current anemic global economy? I wouldn’t bet on it.

Now add this to the taper nonsense.

As previously discussed, QE is at best a placebo, and more likely a negative as it removes interest income from the economy.

But with none of the name institutions of higher learning teaching this, today’s portfolio managers think it’s somehow a ‘stimulus’ and act accordingly, driving up stock prices globally, supporting global ‘confidence’, even as growth and earnings show signs of fading. And then when the Fed even discusses the possibility of reducing the volume of QE, they all stampede the other way, with bonds reacting to the same misguided QE logic as well. But in any case, these are misguided, one time portfolio shifts, that tend to reverse with time as the reality of the underlying economy/earnings eventuates, refudiating the presumed effects of QE… :)

To conclude, I just don’t see the source of the credit expansion needed for anything more than modest nominal growth, which has now continued to decelerate to maybe 3% of GDP, and a real risk that the domestic credit expansion can’t even keep up with the demand leakages, and real GDP goes negative, along with top line growth and earnings growth.

In fact, with annual population growth running at about 1.25%, per capita GDP is already only about equal to productivity growth, as the labor force participation rate hovers at multi decade lows.

Have a nice weekend!

Ciao!

state deficit spending down

Why Those New State Budget Surpluses May Not Last

By Mark Koba

June 20 (CNBC) — State coffers are building back up—some with record surpluses.

But experts warn that reduced tax revenues— along with a return to overspending—could jerk states right back into the red, and quickly.

“Some of the states’ deficit reduction is coming from economic growth, but most of it is coming from taxes,” said Elizabeth McNichol of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. McNichol authored a study this month on state revenue increases.

The increased revenues came about because many taxpayers front-loaded income into 2012 rather than 2013 in an effort to steer clear of tax plans mandated on the Congressional level, according to McNichol.

The danger for states is getting to depend on those revenues.

“While those taxes filled state budgets at least for now. there’s no guarantee they will be there in the future,” said McNichol.

“And with cutbacks in funding from the federal government and a slower economy, that could leave states high and dry if they squander surpluses on new government programs or premature tax cuts,” she said. “They could be back where they started.”

Disappearing Deficits

U.S. state budgets suffered their worst downturn in 70 years from the Great Recession, according to the CPBB. More than half the states had deficits.

But many budget declines are evaporating, if not completely disappearing.

In the midst of an energy and agricultural boom, North Dakota is projecting a $1.6 billion surplus over its two-year budgeting cycle. Texas projects an $8.8 billion surplus over its current two-year budget cycle.

Florida, forced to make deep spending cuts in recent years, projects a $437 million surplus. Ohio expects a surplus of $1 billion, and Iowa a $484 million surplus, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers.

The biggest turnaround may be in California. The Democratically controlled state legislature in Sacramento just approved a $96.3 billion budget, the third largest in state history, based on a projected surplus of nearly $4.4 billion. Only three years ago, California was running a $60 billion deficit.

Much of the credit for the surplus in the Golden State—coupled with spending cuts—goes to a tax increase voted on by California voters last November that ranged from 9.3 percent to 10.3 percent for individuals making $250,000 to 10.3 percent to 13.3 percent for those making at least $1 million annually.

Resisting the Urge to Squander

It’s not just California seeing higher taxes turn to healthier budgets. In the fourth quarter of 2012, according to the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, all state tax receipts were up 5.7 percent from the fourth quarter of 2011.

The CPBB reports that the typical state has collected 8.9 percent more in personal income taxes so far this year than in the same period in 2012. Seven states Florida, Texas, Nevada, Washington, South Dakota, Wyoming and Alaska, don’t have a personal income tax.

But states are in danger of reversing their progress if they spend now or try turning surpluses into tax cuts.

“States have to work on a careful balance when it comes to taxes,” said Stanley Veliotis, a tax professor at Fordham University.

“On the one hand, they can’t raise taxes too high and force businesses and people to move to states with less taxes,” Veliotis explained. “On the other hand they can’t lower taxes too much and lose out on revenue.”

Some states are using their new found money to restore cuts in education and infrastructure—Florida is looking to increase teacher pay, and Tennessee is expected to spend more on health care and its prison system.

California is putting some of its money away for a rainy day fund besides increased spending on education and healthcare.

Others, like Ohio, Iowa and Indiana have lawmakers pushing for state tax cuts.

“States are thinking about cuts, but I think they need to wait and see whether economic growth can continue,” said McNichol. “It doesn’t make sense to cut taxes now if they’re such a main source of revenue.”

Fed re fiscal drag

Fiscal Headwinds: Is the Other Shoe About to Drop?

By Brian Lucking and Daniel Wilson

Conclusion

Federal fiscal policy has been a modest headwind to economic growth so far during the recovery. This is typical for recovery periods and in line with the historical relationship between the business cycle and fiscal policy. However, CBO projections and our estimate based on the countercyclical history of fiscal policy suggest that federal budget trends will weigh on growth much more severely over the next three years. The federal deficit is projected to decline faster than normal over the next three years, largely because tax revenue is projected to rise faster than usual. Given reasonable assumptions regarding the economic multiplier on government spending and taxes, the rapid decline in the federal deficit implies a drag on real GDP growth about 1 percentage point per year larger than the normal drag from fiscal policy during recoveries.

Initial claims,GDP, Italy


Karim writes:

    Q1 Real GDP was revised down just 0.1% to 2.4% but the underlying changes were more volatile:

  • Real Consumer Spending up to 3.4% from 3.2%
  • Capex up from 3% to 4.6%
  • Government consumption down to -4.9% from -4.1%
  • Inventory contribution down to 0.6% from 1%

Takeaway is underlying private demand was stronger than initially reported, government was more of a drag and inventories have more room to expand.

Yes, but note this:

The drag from government and inventories was partially offset by an upward revision to consumer spending, which rose at a 3.4 percent annual rate, up two tenths of a point from the government’s previous estimate. However, a cloud hung over that category, as most of the upward revision was due to higher sales of gasoline. Higher prices at the pump are a burden on consumers, leaving them less money to spend on other things.

And:

After-tax corporate profits fell at a 1.9 percent annual rate in the quarter, the first decline in a year.


Optimism on late 2013 and 2014 growth (Rosengren speech yesterday) stems from government consumption turning from being a drag to neutral sometime in Q3 or Q4, leaving in place the underlying pace of private demand growth of about 3%.

Yes, the question being ‘leaving in place’, as govt spending feeds private sector sales, etc.

So the assumption is the private sector spending that’s been taking place will continue at that pace post tax hikes and sequesters. And note that growth in the credit driven spending (cars, appliances, housing) is showing at least hints of slowing.

Department of Labor reported 5 states didn’t complete their claims count last week due to the holiday, so the rise in claims to 354k to be taken with a grain of salt.

Yes, but here too are at least hints that claims bottomed a few weeks ago and have edged a bit higher since then, and that Non Farm Payrolls peaked in Feb, and if next weeks number prints at 150,000 the three month average is back down to around that level.

And, again, it’s the year end tax hikes and subsequent sequesters that are causing me to look for evidence of subsequent slowing.

This is notable for Italian (and European) growth. Eur10bn (mid-point of estimates below) is worth about a 0.5% add to GDP growth:

EU Recommends Removing Italy From Excessive-Deficit Procedure (Bloomberg) The European Commission recommended today lifting an excessive-deficit procedure against Italy after the government brought its budget shortfall within the European Union limit. “Our task is to respect our commitments with Europe and implement the program the parliament has given its vote of confidence on,” Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta said. Ending the strict EU monitoring of Italian public spending may free up resources of as much as 12 billion euros, Regional Affairs Minister Graziano Delrio said in an interview with daily La Stampa May 27. “The closing of the procedure alone allows us to boost spending by between 7 and 10 billion euros, 12 billion euros in the most optimistic forecast,” Delrio said in the La Stampa interview.

Yes, this would be helpful, but a deceleration in expected US growth hurts Europe as well.

Initial Claims YTD:


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Nonfarm Payroll Change YTD:


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Obama Accepting Sequestration as Deficit Shrinks

President Barack Obama has stopped worrying and learned to live with sequestration.

By Mark Deen

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Gone are the cold February predictions of mass layoffs, family upheaval and the prospect of a new recession because of the automatic, across-the-board spending cuts. Cabinet secretaries no longer visit the White House briefing room to offer dire forecasts about teacher firings or unsecured borders.

With the economy growing, unemployment falling, Republicans unmoved in resisting tax increases and little sign of the public backlash the White House expected, Obama is adjusting to the spending curbs he once derided as “just dumb.” Attacks on sequestration have receded as a major theme of his speeches.

“He probably has concluded that he can’t change it,” said Stan Greenberg, a Democrat who was a pollster for former President Bill Clinton. “He’s moved away from it because he thinks it’s giving Republicans leverage by focusing on it.”

As the president’s criticism of sequestration wanes, so do prospects for a budget deal big enough to address the U.S.’s long-term fiscal debt, a goal central to helping cement Obama’s legacy that has eluded him since midway through his first term.

Sequestration was designed to be so intolerable to both Republicans and Democrats that the parties would be motivated to reach a broad budget accord to avert the cuts, which would slash spending by $1.2 trillion over nine years. Republicans were supposed to come to the table to stop reductions in defense outlays — which are targeted for about half the cuts — and Democrats to restore funding for domestic programs such as special education, jobless benefits and medical research.