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U.S. on "knife edge" of contraction: Fed economist

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A man stands outside a store advertising that it is going out of business in New York, July 19, 2011. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

A man stands outside a store advertising that it is going out of business in New York, July 19, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

SAN ANTONIO | Tue Sep 27, 2011 1:59pm EDT

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - The U.S. economy is on a "knife edge" between growth and contraction, and if it were a dashboard, it would be flashing "watch out, danger ahead on all gauges," Dallas Federal Reserve Bank's top economist said on Tuesday.

"The economy is moving along at stall speed," Dallas Fed research director Harvey Rosenblum told a forum sponsored by the greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce. "Unless we start moving a little bit faster, we are at a tipping point where things may not go the right way."

The U.S. jobs engine has lost momentum and could be set for further "backtracking," Meanwhile, he said, there is also a "credible" risk of rising inflation.

"We are in the midst of the Second Great Contraction," Rosenblum said, demonstrating the economy's predicament with a picture of a place on the Appalachian Trail known as "Knife's Edge."

"This patient is still not ready to get out of the hospital, there are still tubes connected to the patient, and the patient is still not responding well to all the medicine."

The grim assessment of the economic outlook came a week after a majority of the Fed's policy-setting panel backed further monetary policy easing to help support a faltering U.S. recovery.

Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher, Rosenblum's boss, was one of three policymakers to dissent. Fisher gave a vigorous defense of his decision at his bank headquarters on Tuesday, saying he believed the move could do more harm than good.

In San Antonio, Rosenblum said that there is a better than even chance the United States will return to more than 2 percent growth, rather than fall into recession.

But at the recent policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee meeting, given a choice between whether the economy will be better than expected or worse than expected in the near future, most participants said it would be worse than expected, according to Rosenblum.

"The takeaway on the national economy is that economic growth has slowed and maybe stalled," he said. "We are on an edge."

(Reporting by Jim Forsyth in San Antonio; Writing by Ann Saphir in Dallas; Editing by James Dalgleish)

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Comments (8)
Sensibility wrote:
“We are in the midst of the Second Great Contraction,” Rosenblum said, demonstrating the economy’s predicament with a picture of a place on the Appalachian Trail known as “Knife’s Edge.”

“The patient isn’t responding well to the medicine.”

How poetic.

Anyone not a Fed economist could have told you this six months ago.

Sep 27, 2011 11:57am EDT  --  Report as abuse
NukerDoggie wrote:
@Sensibility: “Anyone not a Fed economist could have told you this six months ago.”

Well, yes, but you have to remember that the Fed pumps the economy and markets by monetary policies AND by verbally goosing them too.

Just goes to show how everything they say needs to be passed thru a filter to get what’s left of the truth (not much) whenever the Fed speaks.

The Fed’s only got monetary and verbal ‘sparklers’ left in its arsenal – no real heavy weapons. At this juncture we are so scrood.

Sep 27, 2011 2:17pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Jeepgirl wrote:
Watch out, the Fed may finally realize that government has grown too big and need to lay off a couple of million people that will then need massive unemployment checks or retire on their government guaranteed pensions. Methinks we are at the start of the second great depression.

When Obama won the presidency, I had hoped he would be good for the country, even though I had not voted for him. I think he is just a good preacher that tells people what they want to hear. He does not appear to be a true leader or politician. Maybe he can start a new religion?

Sep 27, 2011 11:36pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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