Whenever the government releases data like that recently which showed GDP increasing 2.8% it later revises it as more information becomes available. So the problem goes back several years. Turns out - no surprise to any sentient human being - the 2007-2009 financial crisis and recession were much worse than anyone realized - or was willing to admit at the time.
That means that the financial hole the economy is attempting to clamber out of is much deeper which, in turn, means that the rate of growth has to much higher to return to whatever normal might be. Or that it is going to take longer. 2.8% is better than the alternative. And following a 'normal' recession might be really good news. But the problems this economy faces are of a more serious nature. Many of them are systemic, which means big problems have to be fixed - like the root causes of income inequality.
Government stimulation would help, but powerful forces in the US and Europe are pushing austerity. This means reduced government spending at a time when it is most needed. This is unlikely to hurt those who feel this way but it will delay or derail a recovery.
One might argue that the government spending cutters should be careful what they wish for (the leaders of the UK and France along with the US Republican party being particularly prime examples)but until voting results dethrone them this warning is unlikely to change their beliefs or actions. JL
Brad Plumer reports in the Washington Post:
The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the last quarter of 2011, according to Commerce Department data. That’s a little below expectations, but it also signals what most people already knew — the United States ended last year on a modestly upbeat note. (To put this in perspective, GDP grew at a paltry 0.7 percent in the first half of 2011.) On the other hand, it’s not fast enough growth to make a sizeable dent in unemployment.



























