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By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
The Associated Press
July 7, 2004
WASHINGTON The economy appears headed for a banner year
despite a springtime spike in energy prices and a recent increase
in interest rates.
In fact, many analysts are forecasting that the overall economy,
as measured by gross domestic product, will grow 4.6 percent or
more this year, the fastest in two decades.
The Bond Market Association's economic advisory committee, made
up of economists from large financial institutions, projects overall
GDP growth at a 20-year high of 4.7 percent.
There were strong 4.5 percent growth rates in 1997 and 1999, when
Bill Clinton was president and the country was in the midst of a
record 10-year expansion.
But if this year's growth ends up a bit faster than that, it will
be the best since the economy roared ahead at a 7.2 percent rate
in 1984, a year when another Republican president Ronald
Reagan was running for re-election.
We are moving into a sweet spot for the economy, with interest
rates not too high, jobs coming back and business investment providing
strength, said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Bank One in
Chicago, who is predicting GDP growth of 4.8 percent this year.
President Bush is highlighting the improving economy at every opportunity,
while Democratic challenger John Kerry has focused on what he calls
a middle-class squeeze of rising health and tuition costs and laid-off
workers forced to take lower-paying jobs.
Who will win on the all-important pocketbook issues? Economists
aren't sure.
It is unclear whether voters will remember the past year
and the better jobs created during that period or the past four
years, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com. It
will be a close call, and that is one of the reasons the election
could be so close.
Assessing the economy at midyear, most private economists are sticking
with the optimistic forecasts they had six months ago, even though
inflation, driven by surging energy prices, rose higher than expected
and the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates last month.
We are looking for a darn good year despite the fact that
we had a big jump in oil prices and interest rates are going up
faster than people thought would occur, said David Wyss, chief
economist at Standard & Poor's in New York.
Offsetting those drags on the economy has been stronger growth
in Japan and China, which helps U.S. exports; better-than-expected
consumer spending; and much better job growth than analysts were
expecting as the year began.
The economy has now created 1.5 million jobs since last August,
compared with a loss of 2.7 million jobs in the previous 29 months,
when the country was struggling with a string of blows a
collapsing stock market, a recession and terrorist attacks.
Even with the 10 months of consecutive job gains, Bush is still
facing a 1.2 million job deficit from the last peak for employment
in March 2001.
However, many analysts anticipate the economy will generate about
200,000 jobs per month over the next six months, a pace that would
be enough to erase the job deficit figure by the end of the year.
That would enable him to escape being the only president since Herbert
Hoover in the Great Depression to have lost jobs while in office.
Although the economy created only 112,000 jobs in June, after averaging
304,000 jobs for the previous three months, analysts expect strong
job growth the rest of this year.
They predict the unemployment rate stuck at 5.6 percent
for most of this year will improve gradually, to 5.3 percent
by December, as a strengthening job market draws people back into
the labor force.
A survey of one group of top economic forecasters showed their
optimism.
Ninety-one percent said they expected the economy to grow at an
annual rate of anywhere from 2 to 5 percent in the second half of
this year, according to a quarterly survey being released today
by the National Association for Business Economics.
Forty-one percent said they expected stepped-up hiring in the next
six months, while 45 percent expected no change and 14 percent expected
a decrease.
By almost any measure output, employment, profit margins,
capital spending this economy is strong, said Duncan
Meldrum, the association's president and the chief economist for
Air Products and Chemicals Inc.
Analysts also are optimistic about inflation in the months ahead,
noting that oil prices recently retreated from peaks above $42 per
barrel in June, and that regular gasoline has declined from highs
over $2 a gallon in late May.
The Bond Market Association's economic advisory committee is predicting
that consumer prices will rise 3.1 percent for all of this year,
a significant moderation from the 5.1 percent rate of increase through
May.
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