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Economy
Fed's economic forecast worsens
2009-05-21
The next stage of the recession is coming ...
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The Federal Reserve's latest forecasts for the U.S. economy are gloomier than the ones released three months earlier, with an expectation for higher unemployment and a steeper drop in economic activity.

The Fed's forecasts, released as part of the minutes from its April meeting, show that its staff now expects the unemployment rate to rise to between 9.2% and 9.6% this year. The central bank had forecast in January that the jobless rate would be in a range of 8.5% to 8.8%, but the unemployment rate topped that in April, hitting 8.9%.

The Fed also now expects the gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the nation's economic activity, to post a drop of between 1.3% and 2% this year. It had previously expected only a 0.5% to 1.3% decline.

At the April meeting, the Fed decided to once again leave its key federal funds rate near 0%, a level it has been at since last December. The central bank also announced that it did not plan on increasing purchasing more long-term Treasury notes anytime soon. The Fed disclosed plans to begin buying $300 billion's worth of such Treasurys in March in order to try and keep long-term rates down and boost economic activity.

But according to the minutes, some members of the central bank's policy committee indicated they were open to increasing its purchases of Treasury notes and mortgage securities as a way of spurring more lending.

According to the minutes, Fed members did indicate they expected GDP to increase slightly in the second half of this year. However, it would not be enough to overcome the anticipated declines in the first half. GDP shrunk more than 6% in the first quarter.

Policymakers acknowledged that there were some better economic readings in the period leading up to the April meeting, but added that they were not convinced the economy was out of the woods yet.

In the minutes, Fed members indicated that there are a number of factors that "would be likely to restrain the pace of economic recovery over the medium term" and added that the credit crunch would "recede only gradually" and that "households would likely remain cautious" in their spending.

Fed members expressed concerns about rising problems in the commercial real estate market as well, indicating that this could cause further problems for financial institutions still struggling with the effects of the collapse of home prices and rising mortgage defaults.

The Fed also reduced its GDP targets for 2010 and 2011, but the central banks still expects the economy to grow in both years.
Posted by:Steve White

#8  OldSpook, I don't know what market you're looking for loans in, but they love my ass. I almost bought a house this month, but it failed inspection in a really ugly fashion, and I bailed before I got too deep into the money-pit. The mortgage part of things was the least of my troubles.

Nightmare-inducing foundation problems? Now *that* was a problem.

I'm just worried I won't get my status turned around from creditor to debtor before Bailout Ben & his helicopters of doom hyperinflate my savings into oblivion.
Posted by: Mitch H.   2009-05-21 17:04  

#7  Yeah, but just think where we'd be without that stimulus package!!!
Posted by: Barack Obama   2009-05-21 14:10  

#6  SITYS.

I hate being right on this one.

And if you ahve not applied for credit lately, you are in for a shock: they simply are not lending money, even to people with "decent" credit. If you have even one late payment on your record, you're not getting a loan these days. And the old "junk" lenders, they are not loaning at all - friend of mine got behind while unemployed, and now that he is working he wanted to get a loan to consolidate and pay off some unpaid medical bills. No go. Not even by the "sub prime" lenders.

The greedy jerks in Congress have killed our economy, with the blessing of the Idiot In Chief.
Posted by: OldSpook   2009-05-21 10:27  

#5  I'm thinking about buying a toyota tacoma and parking it in the barn. It will be priceless in 10 years.
Posted by: bman   2009-05-21 09:32  

#4  The stock market will "boom" on all that printed money.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2009-05-21 08:54  

#3  I don't know no mo - perhaps we are the suckers.

How long do you think it'll be before Obama 'forgives' your workmate's debt on his shiny new car he can't afford? (All on our grandchildren's dime of course...)
Posted by: CrazyFool   2009-05-21 08:30  

#2  A guy I know from work who has become a bit of an NPR lefty over the past two or three yearswas loudly proclaiming how 'things had turned around', went out and bought a new car he really can't afford with two kids in college, and started investing in risky stokcs again a couple of months ago. Obama had 'saved the economy'.

I tried to tell him that the rally was a 'sucker's rally', that the worst was yet to come, but to believe that would have destroyed the na-a-a-a-a-arative...
Posted by: no mo uro   2009-05-21 06:09  

#1  Gosh what a shock...

/sarcasm.

Maybe someone will now stop encouraging consumption funded by debt?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles the pedantic   2009-05-21 03:49  

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