From the TimesOnLine:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he ominous assessments of the likely economic fate of the United States this year were led by Nouriel Roubini, the influential economic consultant.
“It’s not whether we have a soft landing or a hard landing in the US, but rather how hard a landing it is going to be,” he said.
“The recession is going to be deeper and lasting ... at least four quarters … It’s going to be a severe recession.”
Professor Roubini said that the Fed’s steep rate cut this week was “too little, too late” to stop a consumer-led slump in the US economy because American consumers were “shopped out”, laden down with heavy debts, and the financial system was under “severe stress”.
He said: “The Fed cannot prevent this recession from occurring.”
His bleak prognosis was echoed by Stephen Roach, the former chief economist at Morgan Stanley and now the investment bank’s chairman in Asia.
He agreed that with American households under financial pressure from debt burdens that were at record highs and the housing market slump, the US economy faced a sharp retreat by shoppers from the country’s Main Street shops and malls.
Mr Roach highlighted how Americans have been spending the equivalent each year of 72 per cent of US national income, far above the 67 per cent average over recent decades.
He gave warning that if spending patterns now fell back to historic levels in a year “it would be the mother of all recessions”.
It was likely that consumer spending would fall back in this way, although over several years, and this was a necessary adjustment from behaviour that had been unsustainable, he said:
“We have used the overvalued home like an ATM [cash] machine, and in doing that we have taken debt loads up to record highs," he said.
"None of that is sustainable. So we have got to take the excess out of consumption.”
He added that the problem was that Americans were saying, “We do not want to stop excessive consumption”, while the rest of the world was saying, “We want you to keep consuming to excess so that we can sell you things you do not need.”
“What kind of a world is this?” he asked.


