AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Between a Bull and a Bear.(Global Investor)(stock prices and the global economy)

Newsweek International

| May 18, 2009 | Sharma, Ruchir | COPYRIGHT 2009 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Ruchir Sharma

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Is it superman? Investors can't seem to figure out whether the recent leaps in stock prices represent a brief uptick in a falling market or something more meaningful, even the start of a brand-new bull run. The Pavlovian impulse is to dismiss the rally as just another head fake. After all, there have been five other countertrend moves since the bear market began in October 2007, and they all petered out within a couple of months as the fundamental

backdrop continued to deteriorate. Most analysts believe the economic mess has hardly been cleaned up: the American consumer is still deep in debt, housing inventories continue to mount across the world and green shoots are sprouting only because of massive government spending.

Herein lies the key. The trillions of dollars in spending programs can indeed stimulate the economy, at least for a few quarters, reviving growth this year. The broad consensus is that the U.S.-led global economy faces too many structural headwinds to enter a meaningful expansion phase, and that likely will be correct, but in the long term.

The current situation strongly echoes that of early 2003. Back then, most economists were of the view that parts of the U.S. economy were too indebted to allow for any significant recovery. However, policymakers including Fed chairman Alan Greenspan were not going to sit around and accept low growth after two decades of unbridled prosperity. Greenspan slashed interest rates, unleashing a housing-led consumer boom that ultimately resulted in a further buildup of debt in the system. With the consumer now a spent force, the only part of the economy that has the ability to take on any new debt is the government sector. So, policymakers will use that last growth option to the maximum extent possible.

Developed countries are expected to run a fiscal deficit of close to 10 percent of GDP on average in 2009. By next year, the government debt-to-GDP ratio in the United States will have reached levels not seen since World War II. In effect, the government is taking on debt from a private sector that's desperate to cut back its own highly leveraged position. Much like in Japan in the 1990s, debt is being swapped, not paid down or disposed; the only difference is that Japan's debt was concentrated in the corporate sector, while in the United States it is stacked up in the hands of consumers and financial firms.

The road map for the United States today is similar to that of Japan in the 1990s, but contrary to popular perception, that does not mean an unabated dip in stocks and the economy. Japanese stocks participated in some significant rallies during that decade, including ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Chapter II: the global implications of the U.S. fiscal deficit and of China's...
Magazine article from: World Economic Outlook April 1, 2004 700+ words
...in both the United States and global economies...invest in the United States, would be a...role in the global economy as its per capita...U.S. and global economy weakened significantly...date both the United States and the rest...
Keeping the United States the leading global...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times September 23, 1998 700+ words
...concerns about how the United States can weather the current...larger initiative the United States must make to help us...undeniably, a truly global economy. The Federal Reserve...willingness for the United States to assume what he terms...
The intersection of cultures; multicultural education in the United States and...
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News August 1, 2006 700+ words
0805861386 The intersection of cultures; multicultural education in the United States and the global economy, 3d ed. Spring, Joel. Lawrence Erlbaum 2006 257 pages $40.00 Paperback LC1099 Spring (education, New School U.) addresses...
The intersection of cultures; multicultural education in the United States and...
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News February 1, 2008 700+ words
9780805861396 The intersection of cultures; multicultural education in the United States and the global economy, 4th ed. Spring, Joel. Lawrence Erlbaum 2008 315 pages $39.95 Paperback Sociocultural, political, and historical studies...
International Trade and the United States' Place in the Global Economy
Reference information from: The American Economy January 1, 2009 700+ words
Chapter 10: International Trade and the United States' Place in the Global Economy Those who have money go abroad in the world...it comes to national production. Yet, the United States buys far more from foreign lands than it sells...
The Butterfly Effect.(Giving Globally)(Business)(United States's effect on the...
Magazine article from: Newsweek International Wehrfritz, George October 1, 2007 700+ words
...recent weeks have proved that the global economy hasn't decoupled from the...was poised to challenge the United States with 3 percent GDP growth...In a newly "rebalanced" global economy, the emergence of a new Chinese...
Are the emerging markets finally decoupling from the United States?(reports on...
Magazine article from: The International Economy January 1, 2005 700+ words
...cycle of rising interest rates in the United States has brought economic contraction and...countries have really decoupled from the United States. Decoupling is not an attainable goal...inflation is comparable to that of the United States. A key element in decoupling is building...
A world of opportunity: although some world economic changes have negatively...
Magazine article from: The New American Farmer, Brian June 25, 2007 700+ words
...decades following the war, the United States strode the world as an economic...a decade. Meanwhile, in the United States, the advent of the personal...the workforce available to the global economy effectively doubled in a very...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, Between a Bull and a Bear.(Global Investor)(stock prices and the...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA