Alan Greenspan sees slow US recovery

Greenspan, who served as Fed chairman from 1987 until 2006, said the most useful step Congress could take to create jobs at this point would be to enact tax cuts for small businesses.

WASHINGTON: Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan said a US economic recovery is “going to be a slow, trudging thing,” and that he “would get very concerned” if stock prices continue to fall. A drop in stock prices is “more than a warning sign,” Greenspan said on Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press” programme.

“It’s important to remember that equity values, stock prices, are not just paper profits. They actually have a profoundly important impact on the economic activity.”

US stocks on February 5 finished a fourth consecutive weekly decline, the longest such stretch since July. The Dow Jones Industrial Average through February 5 had fallen 4% in 2010.

Unemployment likely will stay around 9% or 10% for most of this year, Greenspan said. “It’s very difficult to make the case that unemployment is coming down any time soon,” the former Fed chief said.



The US has lost 8.4 million jobs since the recession, the deepest since the Great Depression of the 1930s, began more than two years ago. Unemployment topped 10% in October, the first time that’s happened in a quarter century, before retreating to 9.7% in January, according to Labor Department statistics.
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Greenspan, who served as Fed chairman from 1987 until 2006, said the most useful step Congress could take to create jobs at this point would be to enact tax cuts for small businesses. “They are the big creator of jobs,” he said. “But they won’t hire anybody if they don’t have any business.”

Economic Growth

Greenspan said the fourth-quarter’s economic growth rate was helped by inventory rebuilding, suggesting the US economy “shot our ammunition” at the end of 2009. That means economic growth now “doesn’t have the strong momentum I hoped it would have,” Greenspan said.

The economy grew at a 5.7% annual rate during the last three months of 2009, the fastest pace in six years, according to the Commerce Department data. That was the second quarterly increase in gross domestic product, following four consecutive declines, the longest stretch of losses since records began in 1947.
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In the residential property market, Greenspan said home prices are “bottoming out.” The housing market was the epicentre of the recession, and foreclosures are projected to set a record this year, according to private forecasts.

Regarding the federal budget deficit, which the Obama administration projects at more than $1 trillion for the second consecutive year, Greenspan said a tax increase will be needed and that the budget shortfall threatens the country’s standing in financial markets.
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Tax Increase

“I have no doubt that we have to raise taxes in order to close this huge deficit, but we cannot do it wholly on the tax side, because that would significantly erode the rate of growth in the economy and the tax base, and the revenues that would be achieved would be far less,” than one would expect, Greenspan said.

On February 4, Congress approved increasing the federal debt limit by $1.9 trillion, to $14.3 trillion, enough to prevent lawmakers from having to raise it again before November’s mid-term elections. The increase was more than twice the size of any of the four previous debt raise approved in the past two years.

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