8/21/07 -
CIA IN CNN...INTERVIEW: JEFFCOHEN.ORG

AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo28/A002I0708210-465B.MP3
America faces risk of recession
By Donald W. Riegle and Bartly Dzivi
May 15, 2007
The personal pain of losing one’s home through foreclosure
cannot be understated, but as Warren Buffet remarked recently,
the subprime mortgage problem is not likely by itself to trigger
a recession.
Unfortunately, there are four other housing-related dominoes
about to fall that will act to depress the economy over the next
two years and raise a very significant risk of recession.
These four recession-risk dominoes include: 1) the rapid decline
of mortgage equity withdrawals by home-owning consumers, 2) the
increased monthly mortgage payments that will be due on
adjustable mortgages about to reset, 3) the general reversing of
the housing wealth-effect as housing values decline, and 4) the
growing loss of jobs in the home
construction, home sales, and the mortgage finance industries.
The first domino: Mortgage equity withdrawal is the process of
consumers obtaining cash through home equity lines and loans,
mortgage refinancing, and home sales.
A recent study co-authored by Alan Greenspan indicates that
consumers obtained approximately $1 trillion in cash through
these techniques in 2005, which in turn boosted consumer
spending by $325 billion that year.
Goldman Sachs has determined that the temporary boost to
spending from the booming housing economy has already dropped
from 7 percent of GDP in 2005 to 4 percent of GDP in 2006, and
they project it will drop significantly again in 2007. Early
indications for 2007, through the end of March, show that home
equity lines of credit had actually decreased over the prior six
months — the first such drop since 1999.
The second domino may well topple with the scheduled interest
rate increases in adjustable rate mortgages.
The Mortgage Bankers Association estimates that up to $1.5
trillion of adjustable rate mortgages are scheduled to reset
upward in 2007. And more of the same is in store for 2008.
Because personal savings rates are already negative, higher
monthly mortgage payments will necessarily decrease funds
available to consumers for other spending.
The third domino — the wealth effect — refers to consumers
spending a greater percentage of their income because they
believe they have a higher net worth. Since a home is usually a
person’s largest asset, its current value has a big impact on
most consumers’ perceived wealth, and their spending habits.
The S&P/Case-Shiller home price index indicates national home
prices have fallen about 1 percent since February 2006. The
National Association of Realtors has predicted, for the first
time since it has kept the statistic, that the median price for
all U.S. homes will decline by 1 percent in 2007.
Others are more pessimistic. Economist Edward Leamer, of UCLA’s
Anderson Forecast, predicts an annual national housing price
decline of 2 percent to 3 percent in 2007. Given that 2.8
percent of all homes are now vacant — a record since the Census
Bureau began compiling that statistic in 1956 — one can see why
the pessimists might be right.
The fourth and final domino is just beginning to sway as the
number of residential construction, real estate and mortgage
finance jobs — which have increased greatly during the past six
years — now are beginning to rapidly decline.
Membership of the National Association of Realtors has swelled
by 500,000 since 2002, and more than 800,000 construction jobs
were added from March 2004 to April 2006.
An analyst at Moody’s calculates that 200,000 housing-related
jobs have already been lost since the peak of the housing
market. An analyst at Citigroup estimates that 600,000
residential construction jobs, and an additional 300,000
manufacturing jobs tied to housing, will disappear in 2007. If
the Citigroup analyst is correct, additional job losses in the
mortgage finance sector could bring total housing-related job
losses to over 1 million in 2007.
The culmination of these falling housing dominoes is the
stagnation we are just beginning to see in consumer spending.
The Commerce Department’s report of weaker-than-expected
consumer spending in March, the weakest since the fall of 2005
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, appears to be the
beginning of the consumer-led slowdown.
This is a warning sign that troubled times lie ahead for
businesses that sell to consumers — especially in regions where
once-robust appreciation in home prices has now reversed.
For example, automotive analysts found that 30 percent of
automobiles sold in California in 2006 were financed with home
equity loans. Now we see that retail auto sales declined 17
percent in California in just the first 10 weeks of 2007.
While corporate profits have soared in recent years, workers’
wages have not. From 2000 to 2005, real median family income
actually declined in the U.S. Yet, consumers kept spending,
temporarily boosted by cash from the housing boom.
While some commentators have castigated homeowners for being
profligate, most homeowners were using their home equity to
maintain their living standard, but that avenue is now largely
closed.
So one must look at the overall recessionary risk to the economy
from the gathering storm in the housing sector — a storm now
being whipped into a potentially destructive whirlwind by higher
interest rates, tighter credit standards, falling home prices,
and corresponding contractions in consumer spending.
The weak employment report shows non-farm payrolls rose a mere
88,000 in April. The slowing economy is signaling a growing
recession risk which could further accelerate the deflationary
spiral now underway in the housing sector.
As these threatening events continue to consolidate, the Federal
Reserve will need all the skill it can muster to make the
monetary policy adjustments needed to avoid a full-blown
recession.
Riegle is chairman of government relations for APCO Worldwide
Inc., a global communications firm based in Washington, D.C. He
is the former chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban
Affairs Committee. Dzivi is a former counsel to that committee
and currently heads his own law firm in Sausalito, Calif.
http://thehill.com/op-eds/america-faces-risk-of-recession-2007-05-15.html
-------------------------
Jeff Cohen is a writer, lecturer and media critic who founded
the media watch group FAIR in 1986. His new book is Cable News
Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate Media. He was an
on-air commentator (and "Donahue" senior producer) at MSNBC in
2002/2003; a weekly "News Watch" panelist on Fox News Channel
from 1997 to 2002: a co-host of CNN's "Crossfire" in 1996. His
columns have been published in dozens of dailies, including USA
Today, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Newsday
and Atlanta Constitution. He was a regular columnist at Brill's
Content. In the mid-1990s, he co-wrote the nationally syndicated
"Media Beat" column (with Norman Solomon). In 2003, he was the
communications director of the Kucinich for President campaign.
http://jeffcohen.org/
8/21/07 -
CIA IN CNN...INTERVIEW: JEFFCOHEN.ORG

AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo28/A002I0708210-465B.MP3