Common
Ground Seen Holding U.S. Back From Cliff: Economy
The
U.S. will avoid plunging off a fiscal cliff in 2013, according to
economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, as lawmakers find enough
common ground in budget negotiations to avert a recession
31
May, 2012.
This
so-called cliff includes the expiration of income-tax cuts first
enacted under President George W. Bush, the end of payroll-tax
reductions and automatic decreases in government expenditures, which
would clip a combined 3 percentage points from growth if allowed to
kick in next year, according to the economists surveyed. Instead,
compromises will limit the damage to 0.8 point, sustaining the
expansion, the survey showed.
“Forecasters
are pretty sanguine at the moment,” said Mark Zandi, chief
economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania,
who estimates the fiscal drag will shave 1.5 percentage points from
growth next year. “While there will be a lot of brinksmanship and
some tumult in financial markets as policy makers grind through this,
at the end of the process they’re going to scale back that cliff
significantly.”
Investors
today focused on the situation in Europe as concern grew about
Greece’s future in the euro and the health of Spanish banks. The
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 1.4 percent to 1,313.32 at
the 4 p.m. close in New York.
A
report today showed economic confidence in the euro area declined in
May to the lowest level in 2 1/2 years, and China’s state-run news
agency yesterday said the country had no plans to introduce stimulus
measures to support growth on the scale of those unleashed during the
depths of the global crisis in 2008.
Probable
Compromises
Tax
breaks will probably be extended for most Americans and cuts in
spending will be restrained, helping the world’s largest economy
expand 2.4 percent next year, according to the median forecast of 46
analysts surveyed from May 22 to May 24. Gross domestic product will
grow 2.3 percent this year, according to the median forecast of a
larger survey taken earlier this month.
“If
you go over the cliff, it’s a virtual certainty that we will have a
recession in 2013,” said David Greenlaw, a managing director at
Morgan Stanley in New York. “You have this strange situation, which
is almost unprecedented, where you have a big, big change in policy
if there is no action taken. It’s not the case where policy makers
need to come up with something new. They just need to address what is
automatically going to happen.”
The
Bush-era tax cuts that were extended under the Obama administration
and the temporary reduction in the Social Security payroll tax are
among provisions that wrap up at year- end. More than $1 trillion in
automatic budget cuts over the next 10 years are also slated to begin
in 2013, and emergency and extended unemployment benefits will dry
up.
Hit
to Growth
The
expiration of the programs means about $650 billion would evaporate
from the economy, Greenlaw calculated. He projects lawmakers will
extend the Bush tax cuts for most income brackets and reduction in
government spending will be delayed, which would shave growth by 1
percentage point, he said.
The
Congressional Budget Office said in a report this month that absent a
compromise, the economy would probably fall into recession in the
first half of 2013, contracting at a 1.3 percent annual rate. A
pickup in the third and fourth quarters would lead to a 0.5 percent
gain in gross domestic product for the full year, the CBO said.
Most
economists surveyed by Bloomberg projected that Bush- era tax cuts
will be extended for a majority of Americans, with the possible
exception of top income earners. The scheduled spending cuts, known
as sequestration, will also be delayed or made smaller, they survey
showed.
Allowed
to Lapse
The
2 percentage point payroll tax cut and emergency and extended
unemployment benefits will, at the same time, probably be allowed to
lapse, according to the survey.
History
suggests lawmakers will not allow disputes to tip the economy into a
recession. Over the past year-and-a-half, Congress has gone to the
brink in negotiations over raising the debt limit and also funding
the federal government. Each time, after much debate, policy makers
have backed away from the edge, passing compromise legislation to
keep the government running.
“The
fiscal cliff case goes back to what happened last summer,” said
Maury Harris, the chief economist at UBS Securities LLC in New York.
“They kicked the can down the road. To me, the model of last summer
is you postpone.”
Harris
was among seven economists in the survey who project fiscal policy
will not hurt economic growth. Polls show the economy is a more
important election issue than the budget deficit, he said.
Government
Gridlock
The
presidential election may deepen the divide between the executive and
legislative branches, which would increase the likelihood of a
stalled decision-making process, Morgan Stanley’s Greenlaw said.
The
threat of gridlock in Washington has also raised concern among policy
makers at the Federal Reserve, including Chairman Ben S. Bernanke,
who referred to the looming impasse as a fiscal cliff.
“If
no action were to be taken by the fiscal authorities, the size of the
fiscal cliff is such that there’s, I think, absolutely no chance
that the Federal Reserve could or would have any ability whatsoever
to offset that effect on the economy,” Bernanke said during an
April 25 press conference.
Such
uncertainty combined with Europe’s sovereign debt crisis gave
central bankers “a quite reasonable case” for maintaining
borrowing costs near zero through 2014, he said.
Congress
needs to aim for long-run fiscal sustainability in a way that doesn’t
endanger the short-term economic recovery, Bernanke said.
2012
Outlook
The
lack of clarity surrounding the shift in government policies may
influence companies before next year, said Michael Hanson, a senior
U.S. economist at Bank of America Corp. in New York, who’s
incorporated a slowdown into forecasts for 2012.
“A
lot of people see the fiscal cliff as a 2013 story, but you don’t
board up the windows when the hurricane is there, you board up the
windows in anticipation,” Hanson said. “It’s a very clear,
well-defined deadline when the fiscal cliff hits.”
Such
ambiguity is among the “headwinds” holding back the recovery,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William C. Dudley said
today.
“The
uncertainty about how Congress and the Administration will address
the 2013 federal ‘fiscal cliff’ is likely to inhibit hiring and
investment by business,” Dudley said in the prepared text of a
speech in New York. He said the expansion will probably continue at a
“moderate” pace and that additional stimulus likely won’t be
needed unless the economy falters.
Spending
Cuts
Preferred
Systems Solutions is among government contractors already coping with
delayed procurements and agency cost- cutting, said Scott Goss,
president and chief executive officer of the Vienna, Virginia-based
engineering and information technology provider. One intelligence
agency asked Goss to lower his charges on an existing 10-year
contract.
“I’m
feeling more of a pinch and squeeze than I ever have before,” Goss
said in an interview last week. “As soon as they start these
massive cuts they’re going to impact the economy. They can’t just
cut it like that. If they did, it will be devastation of biblical
proportions.”
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