Although CFOs may be mired in pessimism about the economy, in fact
"the cup is more than half full," a leading economist told attendees at
the CFO Rising conference in Las Vegas on Monday.
While the U.S. economy will grow no more than 2.5% annually for the
next two or three years, that will buy enough time for the world's
emerging markets — which are already providing a majority of demand
growth — to save the day, said Raghuram Rajan, a professor at the
University of Chicago Booth School of Business and former chief
economist of the International Monetary Fund.
"Even though the fiscal stimulus is ending, and though the inventory
rebalancing that gave companies a kick this year is ending, I think the
probability of a double-dip recession is very small," said Rajan in his
keynote address. "There is tremendous opportunity building up in the
world economy. It's not a time to stretch too far, but it's a time to
start becoming more optimistic."
That sentiment could hardly be farther from the outlook held by many
finance chiefs. According to the latest quarterly Duke University/CFO
Magazine Global Business Outlook Survey, which polled 937 CFOs in early
September, 57% of U.S. CFOs are less optimistic about the economy than
they were last quarter, while only 14% are more optimistic.
Indeed, Rajan did sound a few cautionary notes. Because of the high
level of debt that consumers have taken on, the U.S. economy will be
limited to modest growth in the next few years, he said, no matter how
hard the Federal Reserve pushes its monetary policy or whether Congress
finds room for additional fiscal stimulus after the midterm elections.
Also, it remains to be seen whether Europe will avoid another major debt
crisis, said Rajan.
And longer term, while emerging markets are expected to be delivering
the majority of the gross world product within 10 years, there
undoubtedly will be bumps and hiccups along the way. "There are reports
saying these countries are going to grow in a straight line for 50
years," said Rajan. "That is not going to happen. There will be crises
from overinvestment and overconsumption, especially in countries that
rely on a lot of foreign debt."
On the other hand, large U.S. banks look like they will remain
healthy for the foreseeable future. Even more important, fears that a
sustained, destructive period of deflation are on the way are probably
groundless, Rajan said. For one thing, China and some other emerging
markets are already experiencing some capacity restraints that will
produce inflationary pressures. For another, in a country like the
United States, where there is high outstanding debt and politicians
can't agree to either cut expenses or raise taxes, the fiscal situation
may assert dominance over the market situation. "At some point the
markets are going to take fright and there will be inflationary
expectations," predicted Rajan.
He speculated that if Republicans win one house of Congress in the
midterm elections, there could be gridlock on fiscal policy as both
sides blame each other and neither wants to allow any movement. But if
the GOP were to win both houses, said Rajan, "they would have a
responsibility to show that they were part of the solution, and maybe
we'd actually get some progress."