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    Glenn Hubbard: Economic Risks Have Risen but a Recession Isn’t Likely

    U.S. markets tumbled nearly 4% Thursday erasing any gains made in 2011 on fears that the U.S. and global economy are headed for yet another recession two years after the "Great Recession" ended.

    In a matter of just days, the overall outlook has gone from plugging along to a dramatically sever downshift.  But after today's better than expected July jobs report, U.S. futures have rallied and time will tell where we go from here.

    Glenn Hubbard, Dean of Columbia Business School and the top economic adviser to President George W. Bush during his first term, joined The Daily Ticker's Daniel Gross to shed some light on whether another recession is really ahead.

    The Good News

    Hubbard believes the "likeliest outlook for the economy is one of very slow growth over the next couple of years" and not a full-blown recession. Slow growth means 2% to 2.5% GDP each quarter. Those numbers may seem doable and like reasonable growth, but it is really not enough to bring the U.S. economy back from the lows of the last recession.

    He also firmly believes that there are things the government can do to help fix the dire state of the economy such as eliminate uncertainties facing the business community. One instance would be to snuff out any worries that taxes may eventually rise.

    The Bad News

    That bad news is that "risks have risen" and the economy is still very fragile and susceptible to major shocks, Hubbard says noting the reason for such weak growth over the last two years was due to the fact that the last recession was not like any other in recent history. "If there were to be a shock — a real problem in Europe another budget issue in the U.S. that could be enough to tip the economy into recession," he says.

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    439 comments

    • irsa  •  9 months ago
      Who are the Consumers ?. Who's money pays Who's PAY CHECK.. Tax's are on the backs of the CONSUMER.. Who are the Voters at election time .. the CONSUMERS .. The Everyday People...The Rich Middle class The poor......We are from every Nation out there... We are America That's what Makes this Nation Strong.We Can all Point fingers, Not gonna fixes this. Hello" Freak-in Wake Up.
    • Jim  •  9 months ago
      we hired the people that got us into this-lets fire them all and start over with business men-not politicans. if we acted like this on a job we were hired for -we would have been fired. lets get off our a??s and do something to help ourselves.
    • TikAro  •  9 months ago
      At this point, after two quarters of 0.4% and 1.3% GDP growth, the "slow growth" 2.0% to 2.5% he's describing would be like breakneck speed.
    • LanceS  •  9 months ago
      If the government didn't sandbag inflation numbers, the GDP figures would show that we are in fact in a recession.

      Also, economic indicators ought to correct for immigration. If we bring in 80k permanent immigrant workers into the country per month, job growth ought to be reported "net of immigration".

      For example if the job statistics show 120k jobs added in a given month and immigration of permanent workers is 80k, then net jobs to the existing American worker base is 40k.

      Doing so would probably show it will take 20-30 years for unemployment to get to a reasonable level again. Certainly the politicians and economists in Washington would rather not highlight that inconvenient truth.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 months ago
      It's almost impossible to track a national economy when the economies of 50 near- autonomous states are in play. I can tell you things suck in New York, New York, but here in San Antonio, Texas (nation's laziest city!) our economy is skyrocketing! So these "We are in recession!" and "We're not in recession!" arguments are really hard to back up when stats are by a nation to nation, state to state, county to county, city to city basis.
    • Kaos  •  9 months ago
      Hubbard isn't that a telescope?
    • Stephen  •  9 months ago
      We are in a recession, More propaganda
    • DJ  •  9 months ago
      If everyone was to assume the market would crash and run to take their money out of the market, our GDP will continue to fall. Therefore the results of everyone taking their money out of the markets will still only continue to contribute to our "slow growth". Government is slack, no question about it. But we need to understand what is slowing us down and continue without fear of a crash, it will not happen as long as we continue to spend and keep our money in the market. Everyone is happy when the market makes money, and everyone is #$%$ when you lose. That's why its a risk. Put your money in safer options and leave it there to grow. If you need that money to live, yes take it out. But if you are taking it out in fear, then it is only helping our economy slowly fall. Have faith, we will all make it out. We are just paying for poor decisions from the past.
    • dochollidey  •  9 months ago
      We also need to lift the cap on Social Security. Everyone should pay the same percentage of their income, no matter how rich they are.
    • markM  •  9 months ago
      So essential Mr hubbard is saying we wont go into a recession unless something happens and we do. Really enlightening. Guess he is right either way, how do I get a job like that?
      • hen na gaijin 9 months ago
        Well first you will need to get a PhD. in economics and start trying to come to terms with the complexity of the world economy. Actually I don't think you can get a job like that.
    • Marty Kleino  •  9 months ago
      But "middle" class on Main St. since 1970's... . Is it Max Weber’s Divide–Devour Bureaucracy “cage” $ystem, with Rigid Aggression, Egocentrism, FEAR, Deception –e.g., Technical change, drive Human systems change, not, Humans Drive $ystems, via, Accept or Reject / Boycott?
    • Jim  •  9 months ago
      It's nice to be a "The glass is half full" kind of guy however, when investing your better off being a realist...
    • FNTM  •  9 months ago
      You are picking nits. We have been in and still are in a recession. Things are not getting better for almost anyone and in quite a few cases gettign quite worse.
    • P B  •  9 months ago
      it is all intentional. they want to destroy the USA. after you get your mind wrapped around that it all makes sense.
    • john  •  9 months ago
      Lots of bulls commenting as usual. Better go buy more gold, guns and work on your garden. You may want to study the definition of a recession. Its when the economy shrinks.....not when it grows. Even slow growth is not a recession, but coming out of a bad recession it may feel like a continuation of a recession. Even within the depression there was a number of bull and bear markets, even some of the best bull markets ever. This is a correction.....and that is most likely all it will be. I have been hearing this is a suckers rally for 2 years.....did you not get back in at Dow 6600? Missed one of the best bull markets ever? Please.....
    • Ken  •  9 months ago
      Any rise now is a sucker ralley!
    • Joey Biden  •  9 months ago
      the recession is over by royal proclaimation.
    • wes  •  9 months ago
      Keynsians are screwing this country over. Its time people realized this.
    • MCMCMCM  •  9 months ago
      Ahhh Glenn. Winner of Best Supporting Actor award in Inside Job.
      For the funny commentators talking about more cuts to avoid a recession/depression: please learn math and history.
    • WISCHEESE  •  9 months ago
      high frequency trading will cause larger highs and lows, it's statistical crazy speculation swings.

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