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Politics : High Tolerance Plasticity -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Think4Yourself who wrote (3238)4/12/2001 9:59:32 AM
From: Tommaso  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23153
 
I did find the story: THE PRODUCER PRICE INDEX, which measures
inflation pressures before they reach store shelves, edged
down by 0.1 percent last month, the Labor Department
reported Thursday. That followed a 0.1 percent rise in
February.
In another report, sales at the nation’s retailers fell by
0.2 percent in March, a weaker showing than analysts
expected and fresh evidence of a slower economy.
Consumers, whose spending accounts for two-thirds of all
economy activity, have been feeling less inclined to spend,
given stock market volatility, lower confidence in the
economy and a weaker job market.
The March PPI was a much better reading on inflation
than many analysts expected. They were forecasting
wholesale prices would actually increase by 0.1 percent.
With inflation posing little current risk to the economy,
the Federal Reserve has plenty of room to lower interest
rates again in an effort to rejuvenate weak economic
growth, analysts say.

JOBLESS CLAIMS RISE
In another report, the number of Americans filing new
claims for state unemployment insurance last week climbed
to its highest level since March 30, 1996, further evidence
that the economic slowdown is taking its toll on the labor
market.
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Jobless claims rose by 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted
392,000. Government officials said layoffs in the automobile
industry, which has cut production in the face of slumping
demand, accounted for part of the unexpected rise.
Trying to stave off recession, the Federal Reserve
slashed interest rates three times this year, totaling 1.5
percentage points. Economists expect another rate
reduction either before or at the Fed’s next scheduled
meeting May 15.
Wholesale inflation outside the volatile energy and food
sectors - which can swing widely from month to month -
edged up an expected 0.1 percent in March, after falling by
0.3 percent the prior month.
Energy prices, which rose 1.4 percent in February,
actually fell by 2.6 percent in March, the best showing since
April 2000.

Costs for residential natural gas declined by a record 4
percent, surpassing the previous all-time drop of 3.8
percent in April 1997.
After peaking in December, natural gas prices have
eased, and economists expect prices will continue to
moderate or fall in coming months.
Heating oil prices declined by 9.2 percent in March,
the biggest drop since April, and costs for liquefied
petroleum gas, such as propane, plunged 16.4 percent, the
largest decrease in four years.
Gasoline prices, however, rose 0.5 percent in March.
Prices at the pump are expected to go up as the nation
enters the peak summer driving season. Supply also is
expected to shrink given production cuts by oil-producing
nations.

The Organization of
Petroleum Exporting
Countries last month
decided to cut crude
production for the second
time this year, hoping to
halt the recent slide in oil
prices.
Food prices, meanwhile, rose 1.1 percent in March,
the biggest increase since April. Pork prices rose 7.8
percent, the largest gain since August 1999. Beef and veal
prices climbed 3.2 percent. Dairy products went up by 2.2
percent, fruit prices rose by 2.7 percent and vegetable
prices increased by 7 percent.
Elsewhere in the report, prices for computers fell by
5.9 percent in March, the second-largest decline on record.
Car prices rose 0.6 percent and truck prices went up 0.5
percent.
Prescription drug prices rose 0.9 percent, the biggest
gain since July 1999. Economists say the introduction of
expensive new drugs along with strong demand by aging
baby boomers accounts for the continued rise in
prescription drug costs.