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US Economy Shows Signs of Rebound

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
,
AP
posted: 57 DAYS 15 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
WASHINGTON (Oct. 1) -- Consumer spending, the bulwark of economic growth, is showing signs of life as the economy transitions from recession to recovery.
The key question is whether the spending rebound can be sustained while U.S. households face rising unemployment, tight credit conditions and other obstacles.


Economists believe that consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of total economic activity, surged in August, reflecting the success of the government's Cash for Clunkers car rebate program.
While layoffs have slowed, they have not stopped, and many workers remain fearful about what the future holds. The Conference Board reported Tuesday that its widely watched barometer of consumer confidence dipped to a reading of 53.1 in September, from 54.5 in August, as Americans' worries about job security flared again.
The Commerce Department is scheduled to report on consumer spending for August on Thursday. In advance of that report, economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect that spending surged 1.1 percent, up from the 0.2 percent rise in July.
Economic data, after being bleak for months following the financial collapse a year ago, has started to show encouraging signs in a number of sectors.
The Institute for Supply Management is expected to report Thursday that its gauge of manufacturing activity rose further into positive territory in September with a reading of 54. That would compare to an August reading of 52.9, which had marked the first time in 19 months that the manufacturing barometer had flashed an expansion signal. A reading below 50 indicates manufacturing is contracting.
The number of newly laid-off workers filing for unemployment benefits is expected to post a slight rise, climbing to 535,000 last week from 530,000 the previous week, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.
In a fourth report, an index from the National Association of Realtors that tracks pending home sales is expected to rise for an eighth straight month in August. If accurate, that would provide further evidence the battered housing sector is starting to rebound following three dismal years.
However, a separate report on construction spending was expected to show a dip of 0.2 percent for August, matching the July drop, as weakness in nonresidential activity offsets a rebound in single-family homebuilding.
The big gain in consumer spending in August is expected to help lift that measure for the third quarter to an annual rate of around 2 percent. Nigel Gault, an economist at IHS Global Insight, said he expected the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, to rebound to growth of between 3 and 3.5 percent in the July-September quarter.
That would be an improvement from four straight quarterly declines in GDP, including a revised decline of 0.7 percent in the April-June quarter, as the country endured the longest recession since the 1930s.
Most economists are not expecting a double-dip recession, but there is concern that their forecasts for a sustained rebound could prove too optimistic.
The Group of 20 leading industrial and emerging market countries concluded after two days of talks last week in Pittsburgh that it is critical for nations not to halt their stimulus programs too soon for fear the world could repeat mistakes made in the 1930s that prolonged the Great Depression.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-10-01 07:36:33
COMMENTS ( 351 )
Page 1 of 71 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>
Tumblincreek1
9:21PM Oct 4 2009 
YEAH? THE AMERICAN ECONOMY IS REBOUNDING?

LIKE........WHEN?

OBAMA.....SUCKS!
REPLY RATING
(0 RATINGS)
 
Likes2kayak
5:16PM Oct 2 2009 
The baby boomers did not reject education!! The jobs where I live were all shipped over seas and to Mexico!! All the factories have shut their doors here in favor of Congress allowing them tax deductions to move over seas!! How the F@CK can that help the American economy!! Other than retail there are no jobs here..retail pays the lowest of all jobs!!
REPLY RATING
(1 RATINGS)
 
Richardnewy9
11:54AM Oct 2 2009 
Americans will struggle for years because of their economy. The baby boomers rejected education and work in favor of sex, drugs,and rock 'n roll and trained their kids the same way. The result has been a drop, over the past fity years, in education attainment, discipline, and, naturally, productivity. Their mindless liberalism has favored unions which have destroyed major American industries such as auto and steel and forced many more companies to move to other countries. Americans have been living on the momentum provided by previous generations who really learned and worked and produced and also kept their wage demands within reason. Now that all these trends are producing their expected resust, our uneducated young people are living at home with their parents and have almost no future. They know their big rock stars, where to score drugs, all the other hip stuff, and of course are filled with the mandatory self-esteem which is about all schools teach these days, but nothing else. The future is going to be tough.
REPLY RATING
(1 RATINGS)
 
Linuxlund
9:36PM Oct 1 2009 
Just wait until Obama and his corrupt commie-goons start pushing the new programs all over America. Instant death to the economy.
REPLY RATING
(3 RATINGS)
 
Vpqueen
7:26PM Oct 1 2009 
This is just another example of the state run media trying to put lipstick on a dead pig. Just follow the unemployement numbers people, not the smack from AP. This is what happens when you elect a radical leftist, guy with no resume to the Presidency.
REPLY RATING
(3 RATINGS)
 
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