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Ben Stein How Not to Ruin Your Life

Ben Stein, How Not to Ruin Your Life

Recessions Are in the Eye of the Beholder

by Ben Stein

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Posted on Thursday, May 8, 2008, 12:00AM

How many times have you been witness to an event and then read about it in the newspaper later? How many times would you say the newspaper reported the event as you witnessed it?

If you're like me, truthful, accurate reportage is a rarity in your experience when compared with, well, with your experience.

Reports of Recession Greatly Exaggerated

This is as true of giant national events as it is of neighborhood ones. I've been involved in many of these big events, from Watergate to the Drexel/Michael Milken junk bond scandal. The media simply never gets it right. They give an impression, highly colored by the inexperience, bias, and laziness of the reporter. Most of all, in national events, the reporting is based upon the reporter's urgent need to magnify his or her own importance. This is only human, but it's good to recognize it.

I've been thinking about this a lot because in the last few weeks, we've seen a barrage of data buried in the back pages of major newspapers telling us that the "recession" everyone said was a certainty, the "recession" that the reporters assured us would be about as bad as the Great Depression, is simply not happening.

The bond markets have rallied staggeringly. The stock markets had one of their best months ever in April. The rate of defaults on corporate bonds remains extremely low. And index securities that track mortgage defaults are saying that the fear of a colossal national mortgage default epidemic was ill-founded.

Ignoring the Data

Just as I am writing this, new employment data has come out showing only very small job losses in April -- 20,000 jobs out of a labor force of very roughly 160 million, meaning that 1 in 8,000 jobs has been lost. The actual rate of unemployment is falling to a very modest level -- 5 percent.

Yet the national media is still selling us fear of a recession. One of the major national newspapers has a reporter who's desperately trying to peddle a story of national economic collapse even as the economy stays afloat.

And the beautiful part is that it's now crystal clear that we're not in a recession (we could be later -- anything can happen). There was just a report that showed first-quarter 2008 GDP growth was positive, meaning that as a matter of arithmetic we can't be in a recession, any more than a man who's gained weight can also be losing weight.

The Economy's Still Afloat

No, that's not the beautiful part: The beautiful part is that because we're not meeting the definition of a recession -- two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth -- the pundits are trying to rewrite the definition, to make it just about anything they feel like making it. (Or, as I like to say, the new rules allow liberals to call a conservative administration's tenure a recession any time they have the urge.)

Ladies and gentlemen, the dogs may bark but the caravan moves on. Adroit moves by the Federal Reserve have saved the economy from a bad recession. The housing crisis was never anywhere near as bad as the media naysayers were trying to claim. The mortgage foreclosure problem was never the disaster hedge fund traders and their allies in the media were trying to say.

This big old leaky barge of an economy is still floating lazily down the river. It's not as strong as it was two years ago, but it's still above the water line. The big problem for most employers now (as they tell me) is getting decent labor. Any halfway skilled, halfway decent college grad can have her choice of jobs. Anyone with a real work ethic and an education can make a fine living.

Get Real Now

I've come to feel that you, my readers, are my family. So I hope you haven't been terrified by the media and didn't sell your stocks. I hope you've been buying while the market was down. It may have some further air pockets, but the direction sure looks like it'll be up for a while now. P/E's aren't at all high, and foreign stocks are amazingly cheap.

And I'll add another suggestion. My evidence is anecdotal at this point, but I'm hearing of an uptick in home sales in my beloved Southern California and my native Washington, D.C. I think the tide is hitting full ebb, and while it may ebb for a while, it'll turn before long.

The nation is still rich. Mortgage rates are low. Employment is high. Contrary to media reports, loans are easily available to qualified buyers. Houses are still tax-subsidized. Young families need homes. We old people need retirement homes. People are moving for many reasons, and they need homes, too. Clearly it's a good time to dip your toe in and see how you like the residential real estate water.

Bunk, More or Less

As for the financial journalists, take a cue from Henry Ford, who famously said, "History is more or less bunk."

I wouldn't say business journalism is all bunk. But I would say it's about glorifying the reporters and selling newspapers. And while fear sells papers, it doesn't make for good investors.

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477 Comments

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  • William G - Friday, June 27, 2008, 1:46AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Ben, clearly you are a smart man but you whiffed on this article. A big swing and a miss. Have you read the Wall Street Journal lately? The U.S. is in a recession. We have rampant worldwide double digit inflation for items like steel, oil, gas, beef, corn, medical care and goods made from petrolium. Mortage rates are going up. Worldwide unemployment is on the rise and consumer spending and consumer confidence is at its lowest levels in decades. Home values continue to decline by double digit percentages. Home foreclosures haven't peaked yet which means the bank stocks still haven't taken the full hit for the giant mess they created. The values of 401k accounts invested in the market continue to get hammered as companies report awful sales and earnings and lower forecasts for 2009 and the poor slobs that are being told to hang onto their stocks remain in the market. The market indexes are in a major decline including today's impressive 360 point drop in the Dow. Not sure how you can say the stock market looks good. Who knows how much lower the dollar will fall against the Euro before it finds bottom? There is so much bad economic news in the U.S. and throughout the world everyone agrees we are in a worldwide economic slowdown. Stocks will go down or trade sideways for twelve months to two years, maybe longer based on the financial data publicly traded companies and government entities are reporting every day. Missing the mark is one thing if you do no harm but folks that don't know better that read this article might make some really bad decisions that could cause them to lose signifcant sums of retirement savings. This is no time to be invested in stocks. Invest in real estate instead. I'd much rather buy real estate for a song and have it generate rental income or simply wait for it to go back up than invest in stocks that are sure to go down for the next twelve to eighteen months.

  • bearlythere4444 - Tuesday, June 24, 2008, 9:13AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    You're behind the curve, Ben. By the time you realize just how bad a recession we are in, it will finally be over.

  • Jeff B - Thursday, May 29, 2008, 5:08PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Numbers are showing we are NOT in a recession. Stop watching the news.

  • maramwp - Monday, May 26, 2008, 11:50PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I agree with Ben Stein. The economy keeps buzzing along. People will always need homes. Educated people willing to work will always be hired. New energy efficient cars will be popular. Americans will save money on energy and gasoline. The economy will adjust and consumers will adjust. The market does provide a buying opportunity now. If you believe in the American economy, then now is the time to invest in equities. We can get inflation under control by reducing the demand for energy. In the meantime, the cheap dollar brings foreign tourists to America and reduces our trade deficit. America's exports are priced competitively now.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, May 24, 2008, 12:46PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    dear ben, i read this article just after reading the latest paul kellner article in marketwatch. whats a retired carpenter to make of the opinions of experts when those opinions are so different?

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