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‘Recession’ Never
Recedes Far from News Comments
TV reports continue to raise the specter
of economic troubles despite strong growth and low unemployment.
By Dan Gainor
The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow
Business & Media Institute
June 14, 2006

Neither report included any experts who could point out the current
strength of the economy.
The very same day, The Washington Post showed what ABC viewers were
missing by quoting Al Goldman, chief equity strategist for brokerage
firm A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. “There's some panic in the street,”
Goldman said, “but I don't feel it's justified. … We don't have any
signs that a recession is at hand, and inflation, although it's up,
is still pretty well contained.”
Reporter Sharyn Alfonsi painted a far worse economic picture for
2006 on the New Year’s Day edition of the “CBS Evening News.”
Introducing her report, Alfonsi began with an anecdote about the
stock market fluctuating. Alfonsi then ominously warned, “that’s
about the only guarantee this year. With big business struggling,
unsteady interest rates, and signs of a recession, the best some
forecasters are hoping for in 2006 is an average year.”
CNN’s Carrie Lee suggested that Hurricane Rita foreshadowed a
recession during her Sept. 23, 2005, “Daybreak” report. “Think about
this,” Lee said. “The last four recessions we’ve seen in this
country have been preceded by very high oil prices. Well, this time
around all of these refineries shut down in the Gulf of Mexico,
causing some people to worry about rising costs for gasoline, $5 a
gallon.”
Expert Choices to Promote a Downturn
Finding experts who promote the idea of a recession takes effort,
but somehow TV networks manage. Both The Wall Street Journal and
Reuters said the dozens of experts they spoke with predicted 2006
would show continued solid growth for the U.S. economy – not a
recession.
“The consensus forecast of 56 economists surveyed by The Wall Street
Journal is that the nation’s Gross Domestic Product – the broadest
measure of economic output – will grow at an annual rate of 3.5% in
the first half of 2006 and 3.1% in the second half,” reported Rafael
Gerena-Morales and Tim Annett in the January 3 paper. On December
30, Reuters correspondent Natalie Harrison noted GDP growth for the
United States was estimated at “3.6 percent this year and 3.4
percent in 2006.” Reuters interviewed 100 economists.
The networks haven’t looked at the issue as realistically. On May 1,
CNN’s Soledad O’Brien used energy worries to raise concerns about a
possible recession. In an “American Morning” segment, O’Brien
explained that “the U.S. Energy secretary confirms what many people
probably already were thinking, we’re in the middle of an energy
crisis.” She quickly followed with the typical question: “Could a
recession follow?”
She brought in oil industry analyst Peter Beutel who made a case
that higher oil prices would lead to a recession. Beutel, president
of Cameron Hanover Energy Risk Management Firm and author of
"Surviving Energy Crises," complained that “we’re taking billions of
dollars out of the U.S. economy.” But Beutel just last year
predicted that the oil price “bubble” could “burst at some point in
the future” in a
Sept. 26, 2005 CNN.com
article.
Beutel has been a consistent guest for CNN with a consistent theme,
predicting a recession in several CNN appearances. On the April 16
“In The Money,” he made a similar prediction. Of course, long-time
viewers of CNN can go back further than that. On June 29, 2005,
Beutel declared: “Oil, I think, is on a collision course with the
economy, and eventually this is going to cause a recession.” On June
16, 2001, Beutel was again saying that oil prices can lead to either
inflation or recession, though at that time he was hedging more
toward inflation.
Beutel has been on CNN at least four times in 2006. By contrast, BP
CEO Lord Browne has only been on once and that was to discuss
alternative energy. When Browne predicted a huge drop in oil prices
in a June 11 interview with Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine, he was
totally ignored by that network, as well as by all three broadcast
networks.
The Associated Press wire service did write about it on June 12,
reporting that Browne “said in an interview with Germany weekly Der
Spiegel that oil prices could drop to about $40 a barrel in the
medium term as new supplies are found, and might fall even further
in the long term.”
CNN wasn’t the only network to highlight experts who cried
recession. The March 7 broadcast of “Nightline” interviewed security
consultant Steven Flynn who warned that terrorism was a major
economic threat. “If a bomb went off in a sea port, we would likely
see a closing of our sea ports. Bringing the global trade system to
a halt. And essentially putting out economy into a recession.”
Tom Kloza, of the Oil Price Information Service, barely got any
response when he mentioned oil prices leading to a recession on
CBS’s February 3 “Early Show.” “But you know, the question is how
long can we be used to prices this high before it sort of slips the
United States into recession,” Kloza asked. Rather than respond with
information about the strength of the rest of the economy, co-host
Harry Smith simply answered “Into recession, yeah.” Before following
up with a gas price question.
The Good News That Gets Ignored
The key problem with news reports of a possible recession is they
often lack information on how well the economy is already doing. “As
we look around the global economy today, we see no major crises, no
major economies in recession. We see strong growth, inflation
well-contained, interest rates at the low end of the historic level
and rising prosperity,” U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow said in a
June 11 Associated Press report.
While Snow’s quote didn’t mention the United States, the actual
numbers tell a positive economic story. That good news includes:
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Strong growth: GDP growth was already at a strong 4.8 percent for
the first quarter and it was revised upward to 5.3 percent.
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New Jobs: Roughly 1.9 million jobs have been added in the last 12
months, part of a trend of positive job growth lasting 33 months
long.
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Unemployment: Unemployment is now just 4.6 percent, lower than the
average of the last four decades.
Even if reporters stop keep talking about a possible downturn, the
economy will remain in the news. In a June 12 New York Times
interview, James Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells
Capital Management, had some useful guidance about the economy.
Paulsen urged caution about overreacting each time the market
dropped a little. “Every time it swoons doesn't mean we have a
recession coming.”
Staff writer Ken Shepherd contributed to this account.
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