Mon, May 28, 2012, 6:13 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

A Recovery, if We Can Keep It

The evidence is mounting that the U.S. recovery is really, truly gathering momentum. Let's just hope Europe and Washington do their jobs.

615 bernanke1.jpgReuters

When the January unemployment report showed job creation accelerating and the unemployment rate dropping, I declared it a turn-the-corner moment for the recovery.

The evidence is mounting that the recovery is on -- really, truly on -- as Tuesday delivered four pieces of good news that touch all corners of the improving economy. First, the Dow just hit its highest closing level since May 2008. Second, the number of unemployed people per job opening*  fell below 4.0 (from a high of nearly 7.0) for the first time since the end of 2008. Third, consumer borrowing rose by far more than analysts expected in December, we learned this afternoon, which suggests that consumers are rediscovering their appetite for debt. Fourth, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke testified today that the falling unemployment rate probably understates the weakness of the job market. That sounds like bad news for the job market -- and the job market is indeed rife with bad news -- but it bodes well for advocates of monetary support for the economy. The worse Bernanke thinks the economy is, the more likely the Federal Reserve will consider extraordinary means to keep pushing the recovery into overdrive.

The good news stretches beyond Tuesday's economic reports and testimonies. Joe Weisenthal points out, in a wonderful laconic post, that housing starts (the red graph) and light vehicle sales (the blue graph) are also ticking up. This matters a lot, because big item purchases like homes and cars are coincident indicators that families are confident enough to put a little extra on the credit card. There can't be a true recovery until borrowing becomes (moderately) cool, again. Just as importantly, these figures reflect big fat exchanges of money.

chart

chart

As the graphs unequivocally show, the hole was very deep. But this is a real recovery. If we can keep it.

There are some things that could mess with our good vibrations that we can't control. If Europe falls apart and spooks markets, we'll feel the impact stateside. If there's a war with Iran and oil prices shoot through the roof, we'll feel that one, too. On the other hand, it's possible that neither of these things will happen.  And one positive externality of Europe muddling through the first half of the year is that lower energy demands from Europe could keep a lid on global oil prices.

If nothing overseas goes dreadfully wrong, our worst enemies could only be ourselves. Another ridiculous government showdown over something like the payroll tax extension could only give people pause about spending money they're no longer sure they'll have. But as long as the Fed stays pessimistic about the recovery, and electeds in Washington avoid drawing too much attention to themselves, there is a real chance that the winter recovery will be a keeper.
___

*Edited.




More From The Atlantic
 

87 comments

  • Truth Trooper  •  Newnan, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Notice in the chart after other recessions ended the recovery made a "V" except for obamas
    • Anon 3 months ago
      The Oblamer's "recovery" is W shaped
    • 2lidoo 3 months ago
      dear ted , during other recessions 20k banks didnt close up shop , nor did 100 million people lose there homes .. sounds like a depression to me when home values drop 500% thats not a recession . states some facts or be quiet
  • duffydog  •  3 months ago
    what a bunch of crap
    get out into the real world some time an open your eyes
    you will see the true picture what is going on.
    also makes me laugh when the are happy housing starts are up.
    no one is buying what is out there now, an if you can get a load.
    they just keep cooking the books to make the clown in chief look good
    • MR. INDEPENDENT. 3 months ago
      When you have no other arguement say the numbers are false.
    • buster 3 months ago
      The dept of labor simply erases millions of formerly employed from their books, and then says unemployment dropped? Less labor force participation now than since 1979
  • David A  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Hey Yahoo! Why are all of your economic commentaries from leftists? You have two from the Atlantic, including this dolt, and another from NEWSWEEK. Wake up and smell the jihad.
  • David  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    And I bet you believed Bernanke and Greenspan when they said the housing market wasn't in trouble.
  • Les  •  3 months ago
    Wahoo, you bet it's getting better. loans at negative interest rates with the fed pumping as much liquidity as possible. The Labor dept cooking unemployment numbers. People not counted is an improvement!. and "seasonally adjust" a loss of over a million jobs to a positive 200k. wow McBeth's witches couldn't do a better job.
    • Anon 3 months ago
      The true U-3 unemployment number is over 11%, when you factor in the effect of the Labor Force Participation Rate of 63%. The BLS U-3 number dramatically understates the actual picture of U-3 unemployment by a WHOPPING 32%
  • MichaelM  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    I don't buy the guy's contention that the economy is in recovery.
    • Thomas 3 months ago
      I suspect that you also do not buy the notion of global warming or evolution either, right?
    • Ricky Retardo 3 months ago
      And your point is?
    • MichaelM 3 months ago
      You are obviously a commie Thomas.
  • c comment  •  3 months ago
    The recovery is about as genuine as Bernanke's smile (smirk) in the photo. Good until the end of November.
  • DavidJ  •  3 months ago
    The ONLY reason we're in a technical "recovery", i.e. positive GDP growth, is because of trillions in artificial liquidity, i.e. fiscal stimulus and Fed funny money being pumped into equity markets. GDP consists of three factors: consumption, investment and government spending, adjusted for the trade surplus/deficit (we have the latter, of course). But for the intervention of the Fed and federal government, the "real" GDP number would still be recessionary.
    • Steve Jackson 3 months ago
      Considering that the US government and the Fed have both been intervening continuously for many decades, I'm not sure your point actually makes any sense. Even during the recession, the US government and the Fed were intervening. Seriously.
    • MR. INDEPENDENT. 3 months ago
      So the fact that people are starting to find jobs and that car sales and sales in general are up has not helped at all, all these years i thought thats what drove the economy.
  • Barkeep Joe  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Pizza Hut and Taco bell jobs dont constitue a recovery.
  • CRASHMAN  •  3 months ago
    There has been no recovery. With a record number of people on food stamps (46 million right now) and record numbers of long term unemployed in the US, the nonsense stories about a recovery are false. When the unemployed are dropped from the base used to calculate the unemployment rate, the result is a lie. The true unemployment rate in the US right now is around 20%, not the false 8.3% number cooked up by the manipulations of the government statisticians designed to mislead the public.
  • btd  •  Owings Mills, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    "There can't be a true recovery until borrowing becomes (moderately) cool, again." Or it could be worded, "The sheeple didn't learn their lesson when their friends lost everything. Thank God it wasn't me. I want a new Beemer. Presto, economic recovery. What's that pink piece of paper, Mr. Bossman? Cost cutting? Me? How am I...?"

    There will be no fundamental recovery until the savings/jobs/debt/spending rates are sustainable. Until then, recovery through smoke and mirrors, Keynesian devaluation (as hoped for by the author), and best house in a bad neighborhood game theory...
  • Lord Fauntleroy  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    What a joke. Ask all the people who dropped out of the workforce because searching for a job was fruitless. Those people were dropped from the unemployment formula under Clinton in 1993 I believe. If we calculate the unemployment rate using the old methodology, the rate would be 15%. That's not a recovery. I pray we elect a new President.
  • Larry  •  Anaconda, Montana  •  3 months ago
    Why is Ben smiling?nobody is buying it.
  • me  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 months ago
    What a joke the fed is, they have allowed these corporations to bleed this country dry and sit on money and feed them along the way. Fed needs to be shut down and exposed for what it is to take more taxes by inflation so they can share more with there corporate buddies.
  • Amber  •  3 months ago
    Some nut needs to wipe that smirk of a smile off Uncle Benny’s face, permanently. He and Obama flocked up the US economy, just look at the price of energy and food.
  • Kay  •  Duluth, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    What about the potential war in Iraq and the skyrocketing oil prices? If that negative impact cosumer spending....
  • J  •  3 months ago
    The point of this propaganda piece is to offer a false premise (recovery) and a host of reasons (none pointing to the current administration) that might derail the "recovery". Then when things get much worse, and they will, the fingers will point to everything and everyone but the true cause, Obama's insane economic policies. He's had three years plus and all he has succeeded in doing is further divide America and drive us deeper in debt. Sorry, Atlantic writer, we ain't buying it.
  • Somedude  •  3 months ago
    Just a hic up on the plummet to the bottom....
  • BOO  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Unemployed in the US is the worst in HISTORY .
    Worst DEBT in HISTORY of USA
    Don't you guys read ? where have you been ? In China.
  • Jake  •  Canandaigua, New York  •  3 months ago
    you mean wallstreet is in "recovery" right?
 
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