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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (458893)9/15/2003 12:21:32 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) of 769670
 
gee kenny, don't be miserable, this could be wrong. You can hope it is wrong.

Heaven forbid a deficit in bad economic news and only good news.

Group Predicts Sustained Economic Rebound

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
Posted September 15 2003, 9:56 AM EDT

WASHINGTON -- A national business group predicted on Monday that the U.S. economy is finally poised to begin a sustained rebound as the Federal Reserve said industrial production edged up by just 0.1 percent in August. The National Association for Business Economics, or NABE, forecast the gross domestic product, the country's total output of goods and services, would grow at a 4.5 percent annual rate in the July-September quarter and at a 4 percent rate in the October-December period.

In economic numbers out this morning, industrial production edged up by 0.1 percent, business inventories fell slightly and sales had their biggest increase since March.

The NABE forecast, if proven correct, would mark the first time since 1999 that the GDP has been able to grow at a rate of 4 percent rate or better for two consecutive quarters.

The Federal Reserve said the small increase in industrial activity came after a revised 0.7 percent advance in July, even stronger than the 0.5 percent first reported. August's performance, however, was weaker than the 0.3 percent increase that economists were expecting.

At factories, production dipped by 0.1 percent in August following three straight months of gains. The decline partly reflected a drop in the production of costly manufactured "durable" goods, expected to last at least three years, the Fed said.

In a second report, stocks of unsold goods at the nation's businesses inched down by 0.1 percent in July as sales increased by the largest amount in four months, a sign that companies remain wary of increasing inventories amid other indications of economic strength.

Businesses' sales rose by 1.6 percent in July, the biggest increase since March, the Commerce Department said Monday. In June, inventories were flat as sales went up by a solid 1.3 percent. The figures suggest that companies -- wanting profits to improve and unsure of the vigor of the anticipated rebound in the second half of this year -- are keeping stocks lean.

The economy was first hit by the bursting of the stock market bubble in the spring of 2000 and then by a recession that began in March 2001. Those events were followed by the September 2001 terrorist attacks, corporate accounting scandals and the uncertainty generated by the war in Iraq.

"After wallowing like a dismasted sloop in a storm-tossed sea ... the U.S. economy finally appears to have hoisted its sails," said Duncan Meldrum, president-elect of NABE and chief economist at Air Products and Chemicals Inc. of Allentown, Pa.

The new forecast, presented at the NABE annual convention in Atlanta, was prepared by a panel of 35 professional forecasters drawn from the 2,500-member organization.

The group credited the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve Board, which has pushed the key interest rate it controls down to a 45-year low, and President Bush's third round of tax cuts for providing the push the economy needed.

For the whole year, NABE projected GDP growth of 2.6 percent this year and 4 percent in 2004. That would be the best showing since the GDP grew by 4.1 percent in 1999 as the country was in the midst of a record 10-year-long economic expansion.

While economic forecasters have projected rebounds for the past three years that have failed to materialize, Meldrum said the NABE panel believed the optimism now would prove warranted.

"An awful lot of positive stimulus has been put in place both from the tax cuts and the Federal Reserve," he said. Businesses also were finally beginning to step up their own investment spending, which had been a missing ingredient in the recovery, he added.

The NABE panel said business activity will finally be strong enough to put an end to what so far has been a "jobless" economic recovery.

While the U.S. economy has officially been out of recession since November 2001, companies have continued laying off workers to hold down costs. This year alone, businesses have slashed their payrolls by nearly a half-million workers.

While the layoffs are predicted to stop in the final quarter of this year as businesses begin hiring back workers, the NABE forecasters didn't expect a rapid decline in the unemployment rate, now at 6.1 percent.

They predicted the unemployment rate would still be around 5.8 percent at the end of 2004, in part because businesses will still be striving to hold down costs by boosting their productivity -- getting more output from fewer workers.

The strong productivity growth will help to contain inflation pressures, the forecasters said. They predicted that consumer prices will rise by just 2.3 percent this year and slip to 1.6 percent in 2004.

With inflationary pressures absent, the forecasters said they believed the Fed would be able to keep interest rates at the current low levels for an extended period. Half said they did not expect a Fed rate hike until at least the May-July period next year.

However, the group did expect long-term interest rates, which are set in financial markets, to continue rising in response to the stronger economic growth.

The group forecast that the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, a key determinant of mortgage rates, will be around 4.5 percent later this year and exceed 5 percent by the end of 2004. The 10-year note fell to 3.1 percent in mid-June, pushing mortgage rates to 5.21 percent, the lowest level since the 1950s.

Higher mortgage rates will dampen home sales and construction, but not until next year, the forecasters said. They saw housing construction climbing to 1.72 million homes and apartments this year, a bit above last year's record 1.71 million units, but retreating slightly to 1.63 million units in 2004.

sun-sentinel.com
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