Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Reasons for Optimism


 The Big Picture

Would you be frightened if someone told you that the stock market would drop one quarter of one percent this year? Of course not, but that’s the record for the Dow Jones Industrial Average after the latest 250 point drop. The headlines are scary and the future looks bleak. It’s hard to look beyond the Great Recession and it’s easy to list overwhelming problems. The reasons for optimism are more elusive. While the stock market was disappointed in the outcome of the Supercommittee, consider this: the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office now estimates that in the current fiscal year the budget deficit will drop by $300 billion (one fourth), and in the following two years by $460 billion and $235 billion. By that year, 2014, the deficit will reach 1.6 percent of domestic output --- below the long-run average --- under current policy, even assuming a weak recovery. Certainly our future depends on more than the Federal budget deficit; Europe’s fate looms large. But investors shouldn’t get fixated on the problem de jour. Instead they should focus on the big picture.  The U.S. economy remains dynamic and diverse and given time is positioned to overcome policy errors and other disasters.