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Truckers Knew We Were In A Once-In-A-Generation Recession Before Anyone Else

Jan 18, 2013, 21:59 IST

If you ever wondered what industry is the American' economy's most accurate bellwether, here's some pretty good evidence that it might be trucking.

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In the just-released minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee's December 11, 2007 meeting, then-St. Louis Fed Governor William Poole recounted what he was hearing from his nonfinancial business contacts about orders and sales.

Most reported softening activity, but nothing dire.

But not Poole's trucker.

From the December 2007 transcript:

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UPS is expecting a peak season that is milder than in the previous years; my contact believes that the economy is not going into a negative but is clearly slowing down. The company is leasing eleven fewer aircraft this year. To meet the peak, they always lease extra planes for shipping. They are probably holding about steady on capital outlays.

My contact at FedEx says that the outlook is very soft, not much buildup toward the holiday peak.

The retailers that they talked to are anticipating a softer season, not an absolute decline, but slow growth. International business remains very strong. This company is reducing capital expenditures by 10 percent from its previous expectation.

My contact in a major company in the trucking industry says that we are in a recession, the worst he has seen in twenty to forty years. The company is reducing its fleet size by 10 percent, is cutting capital spending quite substantially, and has no good news.

This all the more incredible given the NBER later determined December 2007 was the month when the Great Recession began.

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SEE MORE: The Story Of Japan's 1980s American Invasion >

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