Elliott Wave InternationalmyEWISocioniomics.Net
Home > U.S. Economy
Does Any "Recovery" From the Past Look Like What You See Today?
Can Economists Make GDP Levitate?
By Robert Folsom
Tue, 27 Sep 2011 14:30:00 ET
Add to Facebook Add to Twitter Email to a friend Printer Friendly Get the RSS feed Add to more social media services
Get investable insights sent to your inbox at least once a week – for free. Challenge the way you think about investing with The EWI Independent. Privacy

For all the recent talk about a "double-dip recession," the vast majority of economists still insist that we're in a "recovery."
 
The Wall Street Journal surveys some 40-50 big-name economists each month. The results for September reveal that not one of them forecast any GDP declines for the rest of 2011 or for all of 2012.
 
I'm not a mind reader. I can only imagine what you really think about such opinions. For my part, I wonder if economists have forsaken rationality -- and hope that if they chant "recovery" often enough, then GDP will levitate the way a magician makes his assistant float up into mid-air. It will "just happen..."
 
What kind of recovery from the past looks like this one? What sort of stock market rallies for two-plus years, even as employment, housing and the credit supply remain dismal or are still falling?
 
Why are "nearly all the experts...convinced that the economy is strengthening" when so much evidence says otherwise?
 
If recovery or double-dip were the only two choices, then the evidence would push me into the double-dip camp. In truth, however, the double-dip analysis is also chock-full of flawed assumptions. That's why, in his latest Elliott Wave Theorist, Bob Prechter is so straightforward and blunt in his analysis for the economy:
 
Bulls say the economy is in recovery....Bears are calling for a 'double dip' recession....But, as is often the case, we disagree with both camps: The economic contraction of 2007-2009 was not a recession; the respite since then is not the start of a new economic expansion; and the economy is not going to have another 'dip' into recession.
 
That quote is from page five of the current Elliott Wave Theorist. From there, Prechter spells out exactly what he DOES expect for the economy. Virtually every word of that 10-page issue stacks up the evidence for his forecast.
 

Tags: Robert Prechter, Elliott wave, recession, double dip
Rating: - based on [17 rating(s)]
Rate this content:
  
 
 
EWI's Event Calendar
Aug. 11-14   

4-Day Market Mentor Trading Course - Orlando, FL - Save $600 Now

Aug. 15-17 

San Francisco Money Show

Nov. 10-13    

New Orleans Investment Conference



FFS"The clarity of your thoughts is so powerful that I typically read an issue at least a half dozen times." - R.N., Financial Forecast subscriber

The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast is a rational voice in a volatile marketplace with an unrivaled record of providing tomorrow's news today.

It helps you take control of your investments and anticipate the larger trends that most investors don’t recognize until it's too late.

Preview the latest Financial Forecast now>>

Free 50-Page eBook


Learn to Think Independently

The Independent Investor eBook can help you to challenge conventional notions about investing and explain market behaviors that most people consider "inexplicable."
Download your free Independent Investor eBook


© 2013 Elliott Wave International

The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how financial markets behave. The description reveals that mass psychology swings from pessimism to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific Elliott wave patterns in price movements. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of Elliott Wave International’s market-oriented publications is to outline the progress of markets in terms of the Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in the successful application of the Wave Principle. While a course of conduct regarding investments can be formulated from such application of the Wave Principle, at no time will Elliott Wave International make specific recommendations for any specific person, and at no time may a reader, caller or viewer be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, and trading futures or options is especially risky because these instruments are highly leveraged, and traders can lose more than their initial margin funds. Information provided by Elliott Wave International is expressed in good faith, but it is not guaranteed. The market service that never makes mistakes does not exist. Long-term success trading or investing in the markets demands recognition of the fact that error and uncertainty are part of any effort to assess future probabilities. Please ask your broker or your advisor to explain all risks to you before making any trading and investing decisions.