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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
September 6,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
EMAIL
WEB SITE |
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Outlook
for U.S. Economy
Each month, I respond to the
Bloomberg and Reuters surveys of Wall
Street and corporate economists for the
medium-term economic outlook. Here is
what I submitted to Bloomberg this week,
along with some comments on the risks of
recession published by the Globe and
Mail and Merrill Lynch Canada (further
below).

In a nutshell, economic growth should
reignite as we move through the holiday
season and into 2007 if the Fed resists
pressures to push up interest rates too
much and the housing market adjustment
does not cause an abrupt increase in
consumer savings. The prospects for
either seem low at this time.
Growth accelerating from 3.1 to 3.6
percent over the next four quarters
seems likely; however, this will not be
enough to lower unemployment.
Productivity growth will remain strong
but the economy and labor markets will
continue to under perform their
potential thanks to large trade deficits
and inappropriate exchange rate and
energy policies.
Econometric models present as linear
the relationships between GDP,
employment and other measures of
macroeconomic performance, on the one
hand, and the principal levers of
policy--interest rates, taxes and
spending, and exchange rates--on the
other. In reality, movements in key
policy levers can motivate dramatic
shifts in consumer and investment
behavior at points of inflection in the
business cycle or critical junctions in
asset markets.
The outlook for the U.S. economy and
stock market is quite good. A policy
jolt or some other event that panics
equity markets or consumers could thrust
the economy into a downward spiral.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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