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Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed

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To: pater tenebrarum who wrote (90128)4/4/2001 5:18:31 PM
From: Poet  Read Replies (1) of 436258
 
Survey: U.S. Has 90 Pct Chance of Recession

Apr 4 4:02pm ET

By Michael Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The U.S. economy faces a 90 percent chance of going into recession this year
and will only stage a weak recovery by year's end, a widely-respected economic forecast said on Wednesday.

The quarterly survey of the national economy by the Anderson School at the University of California, Los Angeles
(UCLA), said the slump -- while brief -- would mark the end of the gold-rush mentality spawned by the "New
Economy."

"In summary, while we adjust to a new lifestyle, we can expect sluggish growth, and probably a couple of negative
quarters," economist Edward Leamer wrote in the report. "If history is a guide, the worst part of the adjustment will
be over in 2001, and a recovery to be complete in 2002."

Last December -- a time when most other forecasters were predicting continued growth -- the UCLA survey
pegged the likelihood of a recession in 2001 at 60 percent. A recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of
contracting gross domestic product (GDP).

Leamer said there are major warning signs the nearly 10-year U.S. economic expansion is over. Manufacturers are
scaling back hours at plants -- a potential prelude to layoffs -- and the unemployment rate is creeping up.

Combined with a flood of grim corporate profit reports issued by many U.S. firms during the last quarter of 2000,
these factors make the chance of recession nearly certain, the report said.

The survey sees GDP contracting to 0.2 percent in Q2 2001 and 0.7 percent the following quarter before growing
again at 0.1 percent in Q4. For 2001, GDP was pegged at 0.7 percent, a far cry from the whopping 5 percent in
2000.

"Don't expect the adjustment to be complete by 2002 and don't expect growth rates like 1998 and 1999," the
report said. "It'll be 3's not 5's."

RATE CUTS A HELP

The U.S. Federal Reserve Bank's recent aggressive moves to cut interest rates have also helped to lower the
recession risk a bit, but they won't be enough to offset likely substantial declines in business investment and
consumer spending for major items like cars and computers, Leamer said.

The Federal Reserve once again sliced interest rates another half-percentage point, taking the key federal funds
rate down to 5 percent, its lowest level since mid-1999.

"(But) it doesn't alter the fact that the future isn't as good as we thought it would be," Leamer said, adding, "Better
stop popping those monetary pills and get on with the adjustment. That will make 2002 come sooner."

Leamer said fears over the future should also rein in consumer spending, which had been fueled by a high-flying
stock market over the past few years. Instead of saving money, many Americans used their windfalls to snap up
expensive cars and homes in the belief the good times would never end.

But now that equity prices have returned to earth, consumers and business realize they have to be much more
prudent with their pocketbooks, Leamer said.

A DOLLAR SAVED ....

"The lifestyle of the year 2002 is going to be one in which we prepare for the future in the old-fashioned way:
Mainly we save," Leamer said in an interview. "Businesses will continue to invest in tech and the 'New Economy'
but they will do it in a considered and more thoughtful way."

The UCLA report pegged consumption growth dropping sharply from 5.3 percent in 2000 to 1.7 percent in 2001.
After that, however, it is expected to rise slightly to 2.2 percent, the forecast said.

The UCLA report also predicted the U.S. unemployment rate would climb to 4.8 percent in 2001, up from 4
percent in 2000. The report also predicted a continued jobless rate increase in 2002 to 6.1 percent, which if
reached would mark the highest since 1994.

Overall inflation was also expected to remain tame, easing to 2.7 percent in 2001 and 1.8 percent in 2002. Inflation
was 3.4 percent in 2000.

The core inflation rate, measured as the consumer price index minus food and fuel, was expected to fall to 2.3
percent in 2001 from 2.4 percent in 2000, the report said. CPI will dip to 1.7 percent in 2002, according to the
forecast.
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