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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (30340)10/21/2003 10:05:59 AM
From: Chas.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Jim I copied this from another thread and was wondering if you would have any comments on the info...

thanks Chuck

"""The good tidings can continue, resulting in higher stock prices a year from now, if a few things go right:

Employment, capital spending and inventories must continue to grow, making the economic recovery so self-sustaining that it doesn't require further fiscal or monetary stimuli from the government. Pay special attention to improvements in unemployment and personal income, as nothing juices the economy more than an increased number of workers making more money. A jobless recovery is one thing, but a job-loss recovery won't cut it. Consumers panicky about their pay prospects will stop spending and abort the recovery.

Demand in every region of the world -- especially Latin America, Japan, Europe and China -- must improve. At this point, all but Europe are on track.

With the economy operating below its potential, inflation needs to remain muted. Oil has to stay beneath $30 a barrel, and interest rates need to stay fairly low. Low rates will allow home building and home refinancing to stay on track.

An improving economy is needed to lift tax revenue, narrowing the federal and state budget deficits. Diminishing fears of an out-of-control deficit opens the door to the extension of tax cuts in 2004-05, particularly if President Bush is re-elected.

A growing appetite for U.S. goods among the emerging middle classes of China and India could give our economy a "boom" look -- vindicating free-trade advocates and producing winners all around.

Analysts at investment research firm ISI Group point out that the longest economic recoveries in the past have started out the slowest. If things go well, the U.S. might not face another recession until at least 2010. And seven years of expansion would be very kind to stocks, making the 25%-plus advance of the past year look like a nice start, not a false start."""