24 United States The EconomistNovember 2nd 2019
2
1
ate...We believe monetary policy is in a
good place.” A majority of members of the
rate-setting committee reckon the Fed
should resume rate increases in 2020.
The Fed’s confidence, if understand-
able, may be premature. The conditions
weighing on the economy earlier in the
year have eased a little, but the growth
scare did its damage. Consumers have been
the ones driving the economy forward.
They continue to spend, but with less gusto
than before. Personal consumption spend-
ing grew at a 2.9% annual pace in the third
quarter: not bad, but down from 4.6% in
the second. Retail sales in September
dropped by 0.3%, suggesting that the quar-
ter ended on a weak note. Measures of con-
sumer confidence—a guide to how spend-
ing may evolve in future—have slipped.
Firms, too, are behaving cautiously.
Measures of business confidence have
been softening. Anxiety among bosses is
affecting investment: the boost to third-
quarter gdpfrom investment in housing
was more than offset by a hefty drop in in-
vestment in non-residential building and
equipment. Weak investment figures are
particularly irksome to economists in the
Trump administration, who argued that
the president’s tax reform would encour-
age a boom in business spending. Business
enthusiasm could recover a bit in the
months to come, if indeed a trade-war
ceasefire is declared. But the trade war is
only partly responsible for firms’ woes.
More important is the worldwide slow-
down. Both Europe and Japan have slipped
close to the brink of recession, and the de-
celeration in Chinese growth shows few
signs of abating. A turnaround in American
economic fortunes, if it occurs, will begin
with homegrown optimism.
Hopes for that hinge in turn on the
health of the labour market. The jobs pic-
ture has been the most enduring source of
encouragement to those looking on the
bright side. The pace of hiring has slowed;
payrolls have risen by 1.4% over the past 12
months, down from 1.8% over the year be-
forethat.Butthatisnotanunexpectedde-
velopmentthisdeepintoaneconomicex-
pansion, when fewer jobless workers
remainto be hired.The unemployment
rate,at3.5%,remainsextraordinarilylow.
Solongasfirmscontinuetohireandwages
to grow, consumers are likely to keep
spendingatrates sufficientto steerthe
economyclearofa downturn.
Giventheuncertaintysurroundingthe
pathoftheeconomy,theFedmighthave
beenexpectedto signal itsreadiness to
keepcuttingrates,if necessary,moreclear-
ly.Confidenceiseasiertomaintainthanto
restore,andtherisksofa surgeininflation
havefalleninrecentmonths.Thepricein-
dex for personal consumptionexpendi-
tures,theFed’s preferredinflation mea-
sure,roseata 1.5%annualpaceinthethird
quarter, below the Fed’s 2% target and
downfrom2.4% inthesecond.Instead,the
centralbankseemscontenttowaitandsee
howconditionsdevelop—andtoallowa
presidentfacingthreatsfromallsidesto
twistinthewind. 7
Slump over?
Source:BureauofEconomicAnalysis
United States, contributions to GDP growth
Percentagepoints,annualisedrate
Personalconsumption
Grossinvestment
Governmentspending
Net exports
-2
0
2
4
2017 2018
2019
Q1 Q2 Q3
Net
growth
T
he twin races for the governorships of
Mississippi (on November 5th) and
Louisiana (on the 16th) will show whether,
as a former House Speaker once said, “all
politics is local”, or whether, in the days of
Donald Trump, national partisanship su-
persedes everything and even local politics
are not local any more. At stake is whether
conservative Democrats can win statewide
office in the Deep South.
Traditionally, southern voters have re-
garded governors differently from the offi-
cers they send to Washington. Senators or
congressional representatives are judged
on their party, and Republicans have swept
the South. But governors have been seen as
local problem-solvers. They were judged
on their personalities, and sometimes on
links to powerful local families. In both
states, Democrats this year are putting up
the kind of person who has usually held his
own in the South.
John Bel Edwards is a Catholic who has
signed one of the country’s toughest anti-
abortion laws, has a military background
and is a defender of gun rights. As the in-
cumbent in Louisiana, he is the only gover-
nor from his party in the South. For a
Democrat in a Republican state, he is re-
markably popular, with a net favourability
rating of 18 (50% approve, 32% disapprove).
He has stabilised the state’s shaky finances
and introduced criminal-justice reforms
which mean Louisiana is no longer the
state with the highest incarceration rate.
In Mississippi, Jim Hood is the only
Democrat holding statewide office, having
been elected attorney-general four times.
The incumbent (Republican) governor is
term-limited, so this race is open. Mr Hood
has proposed an expansion of Medicaid
and increased funding for the state’s roads.
But he also looks like a much-loved Missis-
sippi-born country-music singer, Conway
Twitty. He and Mr Edwards are the inverse
of “Republicans in name only”. They are
Republicans in all but name.
Yet even in Louisiana—with its French-
influenced legal system, 2m alligators and
unique Caribbean-French-Creole-Catho-
lic-Cajun culture—the nationalisation of
politics is changing the political rules. On
October 12th the state held its “jungle prim-
ary”, in which all candidates for office re-
gardless of party were on the ballot and
those who got 50% were elected without
having to go through a second round. Mr
Edwards’s vote soared in areas around cit-
ies (New Orleans, Baton Rouge) and
crashed in the rural rest of the state. As a re-
sult, he narrowly missed the magic 50%.
Kyle Kondik, a political analyst at the Uni-
versity of Virginia, argues that this reflects
a national trend: “White, rural areas with
little college education are shifting to Re-
publicans. Suburban areas with more col-
lege graduates are shifting to Democrats.”
Mr Trump is doing his best to consoli-
date this national trend. On the eve of the
primary he held a big rally in Louisiana to
turn out the white working-class vote, to
great effect. In Louisiana the Republican
candidate is a construction magnate and
self-styled “conservative outsider” called
Eddie Rispone who models himself on the
president. He won the nomination by criti-
BATON ROUGE AND JACKSON
Governors’ races in two deep-southern
states have national implications
Louisiana and Mississippi
Democrats in Dixie
Decision time in the Deep South