Sunday, June 14, 2015

Explaining US growth outperformance

PIMCO recently out out a short note talking about US economic outperformance relative to DM peers. Their summary is reproduced below:

Q: The U.S. appears to be the furthest advanced in its post-crisis normalization among developed countries. Why? And what is the chance of a surprise to the upside for growth or inflation? 
Mather: There are three key reasons why the U.S. is furthest along. First, the U.S. was more aggressive in its response to the financial crisis through monetary policy, with interest rate cuts and quantitative easing. Second, private balance sheets were cleaned up more quickly, even if through defaults. Third, new regulation forced banks in the U.S. to recapitalize sooner than those in other countries. Many developed nations simply took longer to respond to the crisis for a variety of reasons, so it is not unexpected that the U.S. is further along in the normalization process.

This is the standard explanation of the US economy since the crisis. In my personal opinion this is an INCORRECT representation of the economic forces that were at play. US came just into a period of surplus, primarily from the fracking boom. This created a jobs, investment and current account boost that outweighed all policy actions that were taken. It's a recurring problem that investment analysts downplay the enormity of the US fracking revolution. 

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