US Poll: Majority of people believe recession underway
| Poll: Majority of people believe recession underway | |
| Jeannine Aversa | |
USA Today |
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| Sunday, February, 10, 2008 |
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Could the country be in recession?
Sixty-one
percent of the public believes the economy is now suffering through its
first recession since 2001, according to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll.
The fallout
from a depressed housing market and a credit crunch nearly caused the
economy to stall in the final three months of last year. Some experts,
like the majority of people questioned in the poll, say the economy
actually may be shrinking now. The worry is that consumers and
businesses will hunker down further and pull back spending, sending the
economy into a tailspin.
"Absolutely, we're in a recession," said Hilda Sanchez, 44, of
Squeezed by
high energy and food bills, "we can't afford the things that we
normally buy," she said. "We are cutting corners in our spending. For
our groceries, we are buying a lot of generic and we are eating out
less."
For many, the
meltdown in the housing and mortgage markets has proved especially
disturbing. Record numbers of people were forced from their homes,
unable to afford the monthly loan payments. People watched their single
biggest asset fall in value, a reason to tighten the belt.
"Obviously the
housing market is creating deep concern. And one of the real problems
could be that if people, as a result of their value of their homes
going down, kind of pull in their horns," President Bush said in a
television interview aired Sunday.
Credit has
become harder to get, thwarting would-be home buyers, adding to the
glut of unsold homes and aggravating the housing industry's woes.
"For-sale
signs are everywhere. In my area, 35 to 40 homes are standing there and
aren't even complete. There aren't any buyers," said Jim Sims, 60, of
Nanette Dahlin, 52, of
For all of
2007, the economy grew by just 2.2%. That was the weakest performance
since 2002, when the country was struggling to recover from the last
recession. The housing collapse was the biggest culprit in 2007.
Builders lowered spending on housing projects by 16.9% on an annualized
basis, the most in 25 years.
The job market
is faltering — a point driven home by a report showing that employers
cut jobs in January for the first time in more than four years.
"The way things are, people are afraid of losing their jobs," Sanchez said.
Employment concerns are contributing to darker feelings about the economy and people's
own financial well-being. Consumer confidence, as measured by the RBC
Cash Index, dropped to a mark of 48.5 in early February. It was the
worst reading since the index began in 2002.
A cooling job
market along with high energy and food prices are taking a toll on
paychecks. Workers' average weekly earnings, adjusted for inflation,
fell 0.9% last year. In 2006, earnings grew by a solid 2.1%.
Wall Street is unsettled and as a result, people's nest eggs are not what they once were.
In fact, that was the top economic worry in the AP-Ipsos
poll. Fifty-nine percent said they were worried "a lot" or "some" about
seeing the value of stocks and retirement investments drop.
"I really dread opening my (financial) statements," Sims said.
By one rough
rule of thumb, a recession occurs when there are two consecutive
quarters — six straight months — when the economy shrinks. That did not
happen in the last recession, though. The economy contracted in the
first quarter of 2001, turned positive in the second quarter, shrank in
the third quarter and turned up again in the final quarter of that year.
The National
Bureau of Economic Research, the recognized arbiters for dating
recessions, uses a more complicated formula. It takes into account such
things as employment and income growth. By that measure, the last
recession was in 2001, starting in March and ending in November.
Bush, citing some experts, said the
To bolster the
economy, the Federal Reserve embarked on a rate-cutting campaign in
September, with two big reductions last month. In just eight days in
January, the Fed slashed rates by 1.25 percentage points. The hope it that the lower rates will induce people to buy more and revive the economy.
So if the poll
figure of 61% is right — that the country is now in recession — then
those relief efforts will help ease the effect of a downturn.
"People are
both depressed and anxious about the state of affairs. The anxiety is
going to persist because we are in an uncertain season economically and
politically," said Terry Connelly, dean of
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