11 Facts That Prove The 2017 US Economy Is In Far Worse Shape Than It Was In 2016

Authored by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,

There is much debate about where the U.S. economy is ultimately heading, but what everybody should be able to agree on is that economic conditions are significantly worse this year than they were last year.  It is being projected that U.S. economic growth for the first quarter will be close to zero, thousands of retail stores are closing, factory output is falling, and restaurants and automakers have both fallen on very hard times.  As economic activity has slowed down, commercial and consumer bankruptcies are both rising at rates that we have not seen since the last financial crisis.  Everywhere you look there are echoes of 2008, and yet most people still seem to be in denial about what is happening.

The following are 11 facts that prove that the U.S. economy in 2017 is in far worse shape than it was in 2016…

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#1 It is being projected that there will be more than 8,000 retail store closings in the United States in 2017, and that will far surpass the former peak of 6,163 store closings that we witnessed in 2008.

#2 The number of retailers that have filed for bankruptcy so far in 2017 has already surpassed the total for the entire year of 2016.

#3 So far in 2017, an astounding 49 million square feet of retail space has closed down in the United States.  At this pace, approximately 147 million square feet will be shut down by the end of the year, and that would absolutely shatter the all-time record of 115 million square feet that was shut down in 2001.

#4 The Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now model is projecting that U.S. economic growth for the first quarter of 2017 will come in at just 0.5 percent.  If that pace continues for the rest of the year, it will be the worst year for U.S. economic growth since the last recession.

#5 Restaurants are experiencing their toughest stretch since the last recession, and in March things continued to get even worse

Foot traffic at chain restaurants in March dropped 3.4% from a year ago. Menu prices couldn’t be increased enough to make up for it, and same-store sales fell 1.1%. The least bad region was the Western US, where sales inched up 1.2% year-over-year and traffic fell only 1.7%, according to TDn2K’s Restaurant Industry Snapshot. The worst was the NY-NJ Region, where sales plunged 4.6% and foot traffic 6.3%.

This comes after a dismal February, when foot traffic had dropped 5% year-over-year, and same-store sales 3.7%.

#6 In March, U.S. factory output declined at the fastest pace in more than two years.

#7 According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, not a single person is employed in nearly one out of every five U.S. families.

#8 U.S. government revenues just suffered their biggest drop since the last recession.

#9 Nearly all of the big automakers reported disappointing sales in March, and dealer inventories have now risen to the highest level that we have seen since the last recession.

#10 Used vehicle prices are absolutely crashing, and subprime auto loan losses have shot up to the highest level that we have seen since the last recession.

#11 At this point, most U.S. consumers are completely tapped out.  According to CNN, almost six out of every ten Americans do not have enough money saved to even cover a $500 emergency expense.

Just like in 2008, debts are going bad at a very alarming pace.  In fact, things have already gotten so bad that the IMF has issued a major warning about it

In America alone, bad debt held by companies could reach $4 trillion, “or almost a quarter of corporate assets considered,” according to the IMF. That debt “could undermine financial stability” if mishandled, the IMF says.

The percentage of “weak,” “vulnerable” or “challenged” debt held as assets by US firms has almost arrived at the same level it was right before the 2008 crisis.

We are seeing so many parallels to the last financial crisis, and many are hoping that our politicians in Washington can fix things before it is too late.

On Monday, the most critical week of Trump’s young presidency begins.  The administration will continue working on tax reform and a replacement for Obamacare, but of even greater importance is the fact that if a spending agreement is not passed by Friday a government shutdown will begin at the end of the week

Trump has indicated that he wants to tackle the repeal and replacement of Obamacare and introduce his “massive” tax plan in the next week, all while a shutdown of parts of federal government looms Friday.

By attempting three massive political undertakings in one week, investors will have a sense of whether or not Trump will be able to deliver on pro-growth policies that would be beneficial for markets.

If Trump can pull off the trifecta, it could restore faith that policy proposals like tax cuts and infrastructure spending are on the way. If not, look out.

Members of Congress are returning from their extended two week spring vacation, and now they will only have four working days to get something done.

And I don’t believe that they will be able to rush something through in just four days. 

The Republicans in Congress, the Democrats in Congress, and the Trump administration all want different things, and ironing out all of those differences is not going to be easy.

For example, the Trump administration is insisting on funding for a border wall, and the Democrats are saying no way.  The following comes from the Washington Post

President Trump and his top aides applied new pressure Sunday on lawmakers to include money for a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border in a must-pass government funding bill, raising the possibility of a federal government shutdown this week.

In a pair of tweets, Trump attacked Democrats for opposing the wall and insisted that Mexico would pay for it “at a later date,” despite his repeated campaign promises not including that qualifier. And top administration officials appeared on Sunday morning news shows to press for wall funding, including White House budget director Mick Mulvaney, who said Trump might refuse to sign a spending bill that does not include any.

And of course the border wall is just one of a whole host of controversial issues that are standing in the way of an agreement.  Those that are suggesting that all of these issues will be resolved in less than 100 hours are being completely unrealistic.  And even though the Trump administration is putting on a brave face, the truth is that quiet preparations for a government shutdown have already begun.

The stock market bubble is showing signs of being ready to burst, and an extended government shutdown would be more than enough to push things over the edge.

Let us hope that this government shutdown is only for a limited period of time, because an extended shutdown could potentially be catastrophic.  In the end, either the Trump administration or the Democrats are going to have to give in on issues such as funding for Obamacare, the border wall, Planned Parenthood, defense spending increases, etc.

It will be a test of the wills, and it will be absolutely fascinating to see who buckles under the pressure first.

Still not convinced? After climbing to its highest in 3 years earlier in 2017, Citi’s Economic Surprise index — which gauges how well data come in better than expected — has sagged badly lately. In fact, this week saw the biggest drop in US Macro data in 6 years (after poor readings on job creation, inflation, housing starts and car sales)

 

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12 Comments
anon
anon
April 24, 2017 12:59 pm

The green shoots from 2009 are solid trees!

USA USA USA is number ONE!

CNBC told me to BUY BUY BUY!

/end sarc

Nurse Ratched
Nurse Ratched
April 24, 2017 1:27 pm

Bring on the used car price crash, we need a seven person vehicle…. Somehow all the “crashing” never seems to trickle down to anything I am buying.

Mark
Mark
April 24, 2017 2:00 pm

There will be no used car crash on Toyotas. The car that keeps going on forever. How stupid was the American Auto industry with planned obsolescence?

General
General
April 24, 2017 4:31 pm

Hondas do really well too. Mine is 15 years old with over 200k miles on it.

rhs jr
rhs jr
April 24, 2017 5:15 pm

Read article & briefed wife: Please don’t spend on anything we don’t really need & start putting cash in the cookie jar (wife, kid’s and friend’s briefings go in one ear and out the other; even my dog is smarter; but maybe they’ll notice now if SHTF next week). PS: Got cured of my Detroit patriotism in the 70s when my Vega, Maverick and Chevy PU were all obviously junk; even my wife scorned my stupidity and said we’d still have a good working car if I’d listened to her and bought Japanese; now we only drive quality and 200,000 plus is a piece of cake.

Miles Long
Miles Long
  rhs jr
April 24, 2017 6:48 pm

rhs… 70s Japanese cars weren’t a whole lot better than the scrap we all had. Honest. Most everything was still carbureted with horrible nightmarish vacuum/mechanical/electrical devices to cut pollution & increase gas mileage, then modified (read… fucked) further to attempt fixing driveability problems. The 70s was a lost decade for about everything automotive. It was the decade of slow changeover. German & Jap stuff was better than domestic, if you could find someone with proprietary product knowledge to work on it, but decent stuff didn’t start being made until mid to late 80s & there were still lots of growing pains. Reliable engine management systems were on the verge of reality, but still not quite there until… maybe mid to late 90s & real expensive to fix once the warranty was over. On board diagnostics started being standardized then too but was, quite often, a nightmare as well until around the turn of the century. The newer stuff is phenomenally reliable for the most part, but there are a whole new set of expensive nightmares in the making.

flash
flash
April 24, 2017 6:43 pm

Economic collapse coupled with government funded foreign invasion…what could possibly go wrong?

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Dave
Dave
April 24, 2017 7:33 pm

My wife and I dine out 2-5 times a week. In just the past year, I have watched at least a dozen new restaurants open up in the immediate area and nobody is hurting for business, and many of them have help wanted signs in their windows. Granted, the snowbirds are leaving the valley for the summer and things will slack off a little. As for store closings, I’m not concerned. I do most of my non-food buying on line.

flash
flash
  Dave
April 24, 2017 7:41 pm

Dave, it’s not about you..OK?

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
April 25, 2017 7:18 am

Sadly Ron Paul was one of few voices in the wilderness , he tried to warn us to stop the path of national destruction we were obviously on . He and a small number of people we could count on one hand were ignored and used as a punch line . Well here we are on the edge ready to fall and the only solutions are coming from the very same pack of liers that put us in this position while participating in the KABUKI THEATER circle jerk : WALL STREET to K-STREET to CAPITOL STREET over and over . They win they have enriched each other as they bankrupted average people at a rate unheard of and now what ???

Trader Jim
Trader Jim
April 25, 2017 11:21 am

I suspect that this one may actually be serious, and not the usual kabuki theater that these ‘showdowns’ end up being. Why? Because it is getting very little hype. Follow me for a minute. I see the averages going up this week by leaps and bounds, ok, great, except that it is entirely due to market cap of a few companies – Apple (which is not even looking that great) is heavily weighted on both the Nasdaq and the Dow to the point where it’s moves literally almost match exactly the moves of the dow and S&P. If you look at the other components of these indexes, they are either waning, both in volume and in trend, or flat out down. Another coincidence, the heavy weighted issues are all coming IN to earnings. If you know there is ugliness to come, and you have many millions invested in these, you are going to try and run them up as high as possible in to earnings, so the buyers believe that the earnings will be good. How else can you dump a large volume of shares without skewing things against you? Also, lots of ‘gap opens’. If you want to make the world believe that everything is great, simply run the futures markets up before the open, when liquidity is low to non existent, then ‘open’ high. Once you open, sell in to the buying frenzy. It also has the added effect of ‘painting the tape’ on longer term charts by making it look like the averages are up 200 points, on high volume. Wrong, it actually was only up the amount from open to close, and most of the volume was on the down side in to the rally.
I suspect that the big guys are bailing, knowing that the ship is sinking, but want to stall things until they can get out first. This is the same type of action that happened just before the 2007 carnage, but you could see this action begin back in October of 2006 if you were paying attention.
Also, notice how the attention this week is on ‘border wall’ and ‘tax cuts’. Even though anyone that has seen this show before knows that neither is going to happen anywhere near anytime soon. In the other government showdowns, it was 24/7 apocalypse reporting about how if the government shuts down, we are all going to be in mad max. Not so much this time, just a few mentions on ‘business’ media. hmmm.
Long story short, be careful, we are being distracted for a reason, because something wicked this way comes…..

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
  Trader Jim
April 25, 2017 2:16 pm

Well said Trader Jim , the curtain will come down on this “ACT” as you said it is a timing and positioning issue for the olygarchy . They will continue to lure the sheeple in and then the slaughter and this time it could be literal rather than just financial