Over-Supply and Under-Demand-: A Tough Equation to Balance

Excerpted from BusinessWeek, “What Falling Prices Are Telling Us”, by Peter Coy, February 4, 2009

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Consumer prices in the U.S. fell at an annual rate of nearly 13% in the last three months of 2008. Prices plummeted for all sorts of goods, ranging from clothing to TVs to furniture.

But deflation missed big chunks of the economy. For all of 2008, college tuition and fees increased by 5.8%, followed closely by price increases for hospitals and legal services. Even fees for preparing tax returns are going up.

This inconsistency in prices casts doubt on the usual explanation for the recession, which is that it’s mainly due to the credit crunch and the resulting squeeze on demand. It also hints at why government efforts to fight the downturn have been ineffective so far.

Here’s the big idea: If the lack of demand that the Obama Administration is fighting were the only problem, you’d expect prices to fall across the board. Instead, it appears that supply—that is, oversupply—is at least as important a factor. The sectors in which prices are falling are those plagued by an excess of factories and ways to get goods to consumers, often because of huge investment in plants in China and other developing nations. Most services, in contrast, are not in severe oversupply and have domestic labor as their main ingredient. Consider this: Prices of goods fell 4.1% last year; prices of services rose 3%.

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The government’s deflation-fighting weapons—low interest rates, financial bailouts, and spending packages—can boost demand but do little to deal with oversupply. The world’s productive capacity is simply too big. That means prices need to fall further, or more factories need to close in the U.S. and abroad, or some combination of the two.

A stimulus can ameliorate the downturn, but not prevent continued contractions in the sectors of the economy where global overcapacity is the most extreme. The world is able to make 90 million vehicles a year, but at the current rate of production, it’s making only about 66 million.

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“Pricing power is now deteriorating,” says a Morgan Stanley economist , describing a “vicious circle” of declining output, prices, and profits.

In many goods sectors, prices still aren’t low enough to bring forth enough buyers. There will have to be some combination of falling prices and destruction of productive capacity before supply and demand come back into balance.

Edit by DAF

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Full article:
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_07/b4119000357826.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index+-+temp_top+story

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2 Responses to “Over-Supply and Under-Demand-: A Tough Equation to Balance”

  1. Chris's avatar Chris Says:

    FDR was faced with a similar situation in the pork industry. When one slaughter house lowered prices and actually sold out of bacon, he ordered all the pigs to be killed and the meat thrown away.

  2. Heartburn Home Remedy's avatar Heartburn Home Remedy Says:

    I read your blog for quite a long time and should tell that your posts are always valuable to readers.

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