I was sitting in my Northeast Ohio office in 1986 when
the building began to shake. I ran out
into a hallway where a group of my alarmed coworkers had gathered.
“What was that?” someone asked.
“I’m not sure because I’ve never experienced one before,
but I think we just had an earthquake”, I said.
No one agreed with me, although no other explanations were
offered. Just then an older engineer,
who had once lived in California, came flying around the corner and
enthusiastically asked, “Hey, did you feel that earthquake?”
No one believed it was an earthquake because they didn’t
know what an earthquake felt like. I
believe that an actual economic recovery has started, but people are skeptical
because they either don’t know or have forgotten what a real recovery looks
like.
Now this is totally understandable when you consider that
the last “real recession” (I am dismissing the mild recession of 2001-2002) was
in the early 90’s, which means the last “real” recovery occurred over 20 years
ago.
I believe a real economic recovery started around October
of last year. It was temporarily
derailed by the harsh “Winter of 2013-2014”, but is now resuming. If fact the bad weather may have actually
provided momentum to the recovery, similar to bobsledders rocking the sled
backwards before pushing it forward.
There is a business district near my home that was
devastated by the Great Recession. It
started showing some evidence of life two years ago, but now there are some
very obvious signs of recovery:
-
There are four major construction projects in
process on the outskirts of the affected region. There is a repair facility to support the
fracking industry. There are two new office buildings, one medical and one
professional. The other project is a
full-service hotel. There is still more
development planned and a nearby road is being expanded to support it.
-
The business plaza in the center of the
district is being totally remodeled. The owner obviously believes he will have
new tenants soon. The office complex
across the street is now at full occupancy, the first time in five years.
-
There is new “high-priced” housing
construction in the suburb just west of the area. A thriving housing market existed there
before the recession, but no new houses had been constructed in at least four
years.
And
those “green shoots” that everyone has been seeking for the last five years are
suddenly appearing everywhere. Hotel
usage is up, unemployment claims are down, manufacturing keeps improving, the
energy sector has been revived. Several
economic indicators have begun flashing “green”. Yes, this is what the
beginning of a real recovery looks like.
It’s just taken forever to get here and we have been disappointed so
many times in the past that we are not convinced.
There
are two sectors lagging the recovery: Housing and Employment. Housing has lagged the recovery from the
beginning because it was the last to crash, the worst to crash, and it hit
bottom after the recession had officially ended. Therefore its recovery started late and it
has been slow. This was a different type
of recession and this is a different type of recovery. Usually housing leads us out of a recovery,
this time it will lag, but not prevent, it from happening. Credit is still tight, but once the financial
markets fully heal and the job market improves, housing will grow just fine.
The
unemployment rate is headed down. It is at 6.7%, 80 basis points lower than a year
ago. Normally this would be great news
if it wasn’t for the drop in the labor participation rate. The Great Recession created significant
structural unemployment due to the high numbers of older workers with
non-transferable skills who lost their jobs.
These people are going to have trouble finding work even in a
recovery. This makes the unemployment
situation difficult to gauge. I just
overheard two business owners (one in manufacturing, one in service) bemoaning
the fact that they both were having problems hiring enough workers. With the increase in business activity, job
growth has to follow soon.
The
conventional wisdom is that the recovery is still lethargic. This week a Wall Street Journal headline
proclaimed: “Sluggish Recovery Proves Resilient”. Only 26% of economists in the latest WSJ poll
believe GDP will hit 3.5% or higher in either the Q3 or Q4. The FTR forecast is in line with this
thinking, with Q3 and Q4 at 3.1%.
But
I believe the “recovery” train has left the station and will only pick up steam
the rest of the year. If this is true, growth will be between 3.5% and 4.0% in
Q3 and Q4. It would start to look like a
real recovery at long last.
The
question that everyone has been asking for the last several years is: How long
is it going to take to recover from a recession this severe? The answer: This long.
This post first appeared on the FTR website. FTR is the leader in analyzing and forecasting the commercial transportation industry. For more information on FTR reports and services, please click here.)
This post first appeared on the FTR website. FTR is the leader in analyzing and forecasting the commercial transportation industry. For more information on FTR reports and services, please click here.)
How long is it going to take to recover from a recession this severe? The answer: This long.
ReplyDeleteThat is a good line