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    AP Interview: Roubini warns of tough times ahead

    DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — Economist Nouriel Roubini, nicknamed "Dr. Doom" for his gloomy predictions in the run-up to the financial meltdown four years ago, says the fallout from that crisis could last the rest of this decade.

    Roubini, widely acknowledged to have predicted the crash of 2008, sees tough times ahead for the global economy and is warning that without major policy changes things can still get much worse.

    Until Europe radically reforms itself and the U.S. gets serious about its own debt mountain, he said, the world economy will continue to stumble along to the detriment of large chunks of the world's population who will continue to see their living standards under pressure, even if they have a job.

    Roubini, a professor of economics and international business at New York University, spoke in an interview this week with The Associated Press at a dinner on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, where he is one of the hotly pursued stars.

    Looking at economic prospects this year, he agreed with the International Monetary Fund's latest forecast that the global economy is weakening and said he might be "even slightly more bearish" on its prediction of 3.3 percent growth in 2012.

    He painted a grim picture of the eurozone in recession and key emerging markets in China, India, Brazil and South Africa slowing down, partly related to weakness in the eurozone. He predicted that the U.S. economy, the world's largest, will grow by just 1.7-1.8 percent this year, with unemployment remaining high. The government, he added, was "kicking the can down the road" and not taking measures to increase productivity and competitiveness.

    "We live in a world where there is still a huge amount of economic and financial fragility," he said. "There is a huge amount of uncertainty — macro, financial, fiscal, sovereign, banking, regulatory, taxation — and there is also geopolitical and political and policy uncertainty."

    "There are lots of sources of uncertainty from the eurozone, from the Middle East, from the fact that the U.S. is not tackling its own fiscal problem, from the fact that Chinese growth is unbalanced and unsustainable, relying too much on exports and fixed investments and high savings, and not enough on consumption. So it's a very delicate global economy," Roubini said.

    He said the biggest uncertainty is the possibility of a conflict with Iran over its nuclear program that involves Israel, the United States, or both. That could lead oil prices now hovering around $100 a barrel to spike to $150 per barrel, he said, and lead to a global recession.

    Unemployment and economic insecurity have become big issues from the Mideast to the Occupy Wall Street movement in the U.S., and protests from Israel and India to Chile and Russia — and at the same time there is rising inequality between rich and poor.

    "All these things lead to political and social instability," he said. "So we have to reduce inequality. We have to give growth to jobs, skills, education, and increase human capital so workers can compete."

    Roubini called for a major change in policy priorities.

    "We have to shift our investment from things that are less productive like the financial sector and housing and real estate to things that are more productive like our people, our human capital, our structure, our technology, our innovation," he said.

    Roubini said slow growth in advanced economies will likely lead to "a U-shaped recovery rather than a typical V," and it may last for another three to five years because of high debt.

    "Once you have too much debt in the public and private sector, the painful process could last up to a decade, where economic growth remains weak and anemic and sub-par until we have cleaned up the balance sheet and invested in the things that make us more productive for the future," he said.

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    21 comments

    • TRIUMPH  •  26 days ago
      It was never a RECESSION, IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN
      ANOTHER GREATER DEPRESSION 2008-2018 AND BEYOND

      Bada bing bada boom.
    • TRIUMPH  •  26 days ago
      Tough times ahead and getting worse since 2008.
    • Marat  •  26 days ago
      Why doesn't Obama have such smart men in his Cabinet?
    • Bone Dog  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  26 days ago
      Anyone could see the callapse coming in 2008. The bidding war in the housing market where houses selling for several times their actual worth and governments spending like crazy much more than they are taking in. Public sector employees making more money than the private sector. Nouriel is right this downturn is far from over and no one care to fix the causes
    • Pedro Obama  •  25 days ago
      Makes the most sense to me of anything I've read here in a long time.
    • Buck Fernanke  •  26 days ago
      Bottom line is that the average citizen is shkrewd for years to come thanks to the Wall St./Bankster/ Corporate run Puppet Government
    • Toni  •  Altoona, United States  •  26 days ago
      Mr Roubini is a realist. Just like alot of other people out here. What he states is about right. If the european countires and the US don't fix there mess. As he states we will be in very sad shape soon. Mr Obama didn't even bring up our deficit concerns. All he has done, is request another 1.2 trillion more debt! When the real truth is that is our greatest threat right now to the country. Till something is done to correct it, we are at extreme risk. Europe is trying to fix there mess. But they are not united in there effort. Lets face it, no one wants to take a financial hit. They will continue to battle it out. But after about two years of negotiations I would say things look pretty futile. It don't look like it will happen! So get ready to lose alot of money when things go down. Clear out your portfolio now.
    • safeinthewoods  •  26 days ago
      ... who the hell sees anything but tough times coming ? ... ignorant ...
    • TRIUMPH  •  26 days ago
      The Fed continues to secretly bail out Europe.
    • Elmo Blatch  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  25 days ago
      Is there a reason for any government to need to borrow large sums of moeny for long periods of time, especiallly when their economies is doing well? Except during WWII, there was never a good reason for our country to borrow it was only good for those who lined their pockets. There are a lot of wealthy people who got that way by persuading Congress to run deficits and even go to war and those same individuals are using that money to further manipulate Congress to help them keep more of it.

      The best thing about the two party system is it divides the country and allows both sides to blame the other for the failed policies when, in fact, it's lobbyists and influence peddling that is to blame but the population is too busy blaming their opposing party to see where all the corruption is being created. It will never change because people are idiots and only learn after a disaster has already occurred...and even then our memories are far too short.
    • Jeff  •  25 days ago
      Mitt Romneys not worried about this.
    • Mark  •  Paris, France  •  26 days ago
      2012 is the new 2008, or uh, something like that. Whatever it is, it involves money.
    • just me  •  26 days ago
      i can't even remember how long its been since i ate some steak... have u seen the prices of beef in the stores lately ? i mean come on... what's the deal... all the steers being eaten by queers or what ?
    • Disgusted  •  25 days ago
      More productive?

      Gee most manufacturing is done with machinery and it's highly mechanized. What you need to get people to spend is that they have jobs. You cant have that without having a new driving force. apparently Republicans dont want more govt spending. they want cuts so if they get in office where will these so called jobs come from?

      I guess if you lay off more govt workers then you will have more cheap labor but those people may not be able to buy cars or a house if they dont make enough. And the republicans under Bush cut public education so we have to import our engineers and other highly skilled workers.

      the republican plan is to have no plan so our young people who dont have the way to educate themselves after high school will be able to compete with chinese labor.

      I hope they put the govt housing next to where all the republicans live so they get to see the results of their handy work.
    • RAMESH AGARWAL  •  25 days ago
      Mr rubini,s expectations are based on the mathematical fundamental concerns n his saying may turnout correct.but public necessities /efforts change change the course of economy which never grows old except structural changes.
    • veraci  •  26 days ago
      Ron Paul's drastic changes could save America but maybe God wont bless us with his leadership because the majority dont want it or dont deserve it.
    • Two Cents  •  25 days ago
      Roubini says we must get our debt under control, but just look at the European economies that have been forced to do that and they are in deep recession with growing unemployment. So obviously that is not the way to go. Obama has been right about stimulating the economy by taking on the economy's debt load. It keeps people employed.
    • ozymandias  •  26 days ago
      Shift investment away from #$%$ children to something more productive like engineering students.
    • Computer Forensics Expert  •  Chantilly, United States  •  26 days ago
      Economist Nouriel Roubini is nothing more than a guy who had plenty of press. He's like a broken clock- only right, twice a day.

      If you keep preaching the same thing, day after day, and it's wrong, people ignore the person. When it finally does happen, the press and his press agent, parade the guy around, give him lots of press.

      It's sort of like target shooting. Roubini, misses the target 10,000 times, but hits a bull's-eye once. Let's celebrate the bull's-eye and forget about the other 10,000 misses.
    • veraci  •  26 days ago
      The more we support Antichrist Israel the more we go down the drain.