By Cordell Eddings and Betty Liu
Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Chief Executive
Officer Mohamed A. El-Erian said U.S. economic conditions are “terrifying” as
the nation struggles to recover from recession.
The odds of the U.S. returning to
recession are as much as 50 percent, El-Erian said during an interview on
Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop” with Betty Liu. U.S. economic growth was
worse than expected and congressional policy makers are gridlocked over what to
do about the economy and the deficit, which risk exacerbating an already weak
recovery, he said.
“We have less economic momentum than we thought we had and we have no policy momentum,” said El-Erian, who also serves as co-chief investment officer with Pimco founder Bill Gross at the world’s largest manager of bond funds.
“What’s most terrifying,” he said, “we
are having this discussion about the risk of recession at a time when
unemployment is already too high, at a time when a quarter of homeowners are
underwater on their mortgages, at a time then the fiscal deficit is at 9
percent and at a time when interest rates are at zero.”
The economy in the U.S. expanded less
than previously estimated in the third quarter, reflecting a drop in
inventories that points to a pickup in growth as 2011 comes to a close.
Structural Issues
Gross domestic product climbed at a 2
percent annual rate from July through September, less than projected and down
from a 2.5 percent prior estimate, revised Commerce Department figures showed
today in Washington. The median forecast of 81 economists surveyed by Bloomberg
News called for no revision. Excluding stockpiles, so-called final sales
climbed 3.6 percent, the most since last year’s fourth quarter.
Conditions may worse if policy makers in
Washington and in Europe do not act quickly to address structural economic
issues, El Erian said.
The debt crisis that began more than two
years ago in Greece and snared Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain is close to
reaching France. U.S. lawmakers yesterday failed to agree on spending cuts to
address budget deficits.
“The big concern is us being tipped over
by Europe. And things in Europe are getting worse, not better,” he said.
“Unlike Europe, the U.S. doesn’t have an engineering problem. It faces a
political problem.”
European policy makers have to choose
between a full fiscal union or a smaller euro zone, two options with heavy
costs that have paralyzed policy makers, El-Erian said from Pimco’s
headquarters in Newport Beach, California.
Total Return Fund
“The muddled middle is no long
sustainable,” El-Erian said. “Europe needs to make a choice if it wants to save
the euro,” he said.
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