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Thomas Jefferson Institute 2007 Innovations in Government Conference: Economic Update

Thomas Jefferson Institute 2007 Innovations in Government Conference: Economic Update. December 2007. Overview. Elevated uncertainty with national growth slow through early next year Lack of home price appreciation/sub-prime lending issues = drag on consumer spending

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Thomas Jefferson Institute 2007 Innovations in Government Conference: Economic Update

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  1. Thomas Jefferson Institute 2007 Innovations in Government Conference: Economic Update December 2007

  2. Overview • Elevated uncertainty with national growth slow through early next year • Lack of home price appreciation/sub-prime lending issues = drag on consumer spending • No recession; further Fed ease is unlikely • Virginia ranked 16th in the nation (job growth) • Northern Virginia not the fastest growing region but creating the most jobs

  3. Real GDP Almost Stalled in 1st Qtr; 4.9% in 3rd Quarter Data through 3rd Quarter 2007. Recessions are shaded.

  4. Residential Building Impact on Real GDP

  5. Fed’s Preference? Recession or Accelerating Inflation? • “The Federal Reserve sets the nation’s monetary policy to promote the objectives of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates. The challenge for policy makers is that tensions among the goals can arise in the short run and that information about the economy becomes available only with a lag and may be imperfect.” • The Federal Reserve has supervisory and regulatory authority over a wide range of financial institutions and activities. It works with other federal and state supervisory authorities to ensure the safety and soundness of financial institutions…. • August 17 action was sector-specific (liquidity in financial markets) • September 18 action acknowledged spillover to the broader economy • October 30/31 cut another 25 bps • December 11 cut another 25 bps to 4.25%

  6. December 11 FOMC Press Release • Incoming information suggests that economic growth is slowing, reflecting the intensification of the housing correction and some softening in business and consumer spending. Moreover, strains in financial markets have increased in recent weeks.  Today’s action, combined with the policy actions taken earlier, should help promote moderate growth over time. • Readings on core inflation have improved modestly this year, but elevated energy and commodity prices, among other factors, may put upward pressure on inflation.  In this context, the Committee judges that some inflation risks remain, and it will continue to monitor inflation developments carefully. • Recent developments, including the deterioration in financial market conditions, have increased the uncertainty surrounding the outlook for economic growth and inflation.  The Committee will continue to assess the effects of financial and other developments on economic prospects and will act as needed to foster price stability and sustainable economic growth.

  7. Probability of Recession = 29% for May 2008 Data through May 2008. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics.

  8. Will the Fed Ease Further? • Inflation is at the top end of the Fed ‘comfort zone’ (argues against easing) • Weaker dollar causes higher import prices • Oil prices • Interest rates are accommodative • Outside of residential market, economy continues to grow

  9. Consumers are Still Spending No Inventory Imbalances Data through November 2007.

  10. Industrial Production Slowed but Still Growing Data through November 2007.

  11. IT Output Still Near 20% Data through November 2007.

  12. Slowdown is Mainly Housing-Related (Production for Housing Materials is Off) Data through August 2007.

  13. Housing Sector is in Recession (Near 14-Year Low, Down 46% From January 2006) Data through October 2007.

  14. National Forecast

  15. Summary of US Growth • Housing contribution to GDP turns slightly positive in 3rd quarter but housing starts remain flat through 2008 • No more Fed ease • Overall GDP at 1.9% in 2007 (2.9% in 2006) • Risks: • Oil rises further • International investors pull out of bond market • Subprime mortgage leads to broader credit crunch

  16. State Rankings, Employment Year-over-Year October 2007 VA 1.5%, 56,000 jobs # 16 Utah +4.2%, 51,400 Wyoming +3.4%, 14600 Ohio -0.02%, -11,500 Michigan -1.5%, -75,000

  17. Employment in VA Back Above National Pace Data through October 2007.

  18. Employment Growth by Sector

  19. Employment Growth by Sector

  20. Initial Claims are Flat in Virginia Data through October 2007.

  21. Northern Virginia Slows to State Average (20,000 jobs) Data through October 2007.

  22. Employment by Sector

  23. 4th Quarter 2006 -7.0% (Benchmark)Covered Employment and Wages = -0.1%

  24. Labor Market to Remain Weak in NVA Data through October 2007.

  25. Housing Permits Off 46% From Peak Data through October 2007. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics, U.S. Census.

  26. NVA Housing Activity; Off 58% From Peak Data through October 2007. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics, U.S. Census.

  27. Permits Fell 72% in the Early 1990s Data through May 2007. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics, U.S. Census.

  28. Home Prices Have Risen Data through 2nd Quarter 2007. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight

  29. …Making Homes Less Affordable Data through 2nd Quarter 2007. Source: Chmura Economics & Analytics, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight

  30. Imbalances Still Exist…13 Month Supply Source: MLS Data through September 2007.C

  31. Retail Sales Have Slowed Considerably Data through October 2007

  32. Employment Annual Percentage Change Chmura Economics & Analytics.

  33. Take Aways • U.S. growth remains sluggish through first half of 2008 • No more Fed ease… accelerating inflation is an issue • Virginia continues at national average • Construction employment dragging down Northern Virginia employment growth • Recession not in forecast for early 2008

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