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- <text id=94TT0013>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: Picking Up Speed
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 18
- Picking Up Speed
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>TIME's economists see healthier growth in 1994 but warn that
- continued downsizing will slow job creation
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Bernard Baumohl/New York
- </p>
- <p> For a President whose term got off to a stumbling start, Bill
- Clinton is ending his first year in office on an economic hot
- streak. First he won come-from-behind victories on deficit reduction
- and the North American Free Trade Agreement. Then came a global
- trade agreement that may help boost U.S. exports in the long
- run. And last week the government reported that Americans were
- buying existing homes at an annual rate of 4.21 million units
- in November, the fastest pace ever. Now Clinton is about to
- get a windfall: 1994 is likely to be the year in which the reluctant
- recovery finally kicks into gear. When TIME gathered six leading
- economists to assess the 1994 outlook, there was not a Cassandra
- among them: they foresaw the strongest U.S. growth since the
- late 1980s combined with continued low inflation and gradually
- falling unemployment. "I describe my forecast as `the best of
- all possible worlds,'" said a buoyant Edward Yardeni, chief
- economist for the investment firm C.J. Lawrence.
- </p>
- <p> Yardeni's point is that the predictions being made by most economists
- describe the sort of stable, healthy economy for which Americans
- have been longing for two decades or more. Few economists see
- the bogey of inflation or another recession returning anytime
- soon. In large part that's because of the widespread belief
- that Clinton will continue to push hard for health-care reform
- and budget-deficit reduction. As long as he does, interest rates
- and consumer prices are likely to remain low.
- </p>
- <p> Yet lurking beneath these positive numbers is long-term economic
- turmoil created by global competition, most notably the now
- familiar chill of massive and continuing corporate downsizing.
- A record 600,000 announced layoffs took place last year, a process
- that shows little sign of abating in 1994. Partly because of
- such cutbacks, the economy has created only 3 million new jobs
- since the 1990-91 recession ended, or less than half the number
- produced in the typical postwar recovery. "This is a very tough-sell
- kind of economy, and it's going to continue to be so," said
- Laurence Meyer, an economic consultant based in St. Louis, Missouri,
- who was named the top forecaster in 1993 in a national survey.
- "There's a certain sense of struggle, even in this kind of prosperity,
- that I think makes it unique."
- </p>
- <p> That's because the recovery remains in the throes of two distinct
- economic cycles, the TIME panel agreed. On the one hand, the
- U.S. has clearly rebounded from the 1990 slump as low interest
- rates and the release of pent-up consumer demand have set off
- a run on such big-ticket items as houses and cars. On the other
- hand, the payroll slashing that dates back to the 1980s remains
- in full force as U.S. corporations strive to compete in world
- markets. Even the boom in business investment, which has boosted
- economic growth, has gone largely for computers and other labor-saving
- devices rather than for job-creating new factories and machinery.
- "The fixation of the moment continues to be on downsizing and
- cost cutting, whether it's through machines or layoffs, and
- that fixation remains very intense," says Stephen Roach, co-director
- of global economic analysis for Morgan Stanley. "I don't think
- it's going to subside."
- </p>
- <p> Despite such crosscurrents, the U.S. has been growing far faster
- than its industrial allies and promises to widen the gap in
- 1994 as both Japan and Europe remain mired in slumps. Yet that
- could set the stage for stronger U.S. growth in 1995 once Japan
- and Europe begin to recover and increase their purchases of
- American exports.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, millions of Americans have spent the early 1990s
- adjusting to constrained times and now feel they can afford
- to crack open their wallets and pocketbooks in 1994. Many consumers
- who still have their jobs see themselves as "survivors" of one
- of the worst upheavals ever seen in the work force, the TIME
- economists said. Moreover, "American workers have adapted to
- the idea that they're not going to have the same job forever,"
- said labor economist Audrey Freedman, who runs a New York City-based
- management consulting firm. They have learned to accept the
- inevitable job shifts, Freedman noted, and are determined to
- get on with their lives as best they can. Work forces in Europe
- and Japan have shown no such mobility or adaptability.
- </p>
- <p> Buoyed by this new and cautious confidence, buyers are coming
- back into stores, showrooms and real estate offices to take
- advantage of sales and attractively low interest rates. With
- 30-year fixed mortgage rates now at about 7%, single-family
- housing starts have returned to the brisk pace of the mid-1980s.
- The resurgent real estate market has boosted demand for furniture,
- carpets, appliances and everything else that helps make a house
- a home. Many consumers have also taken the savings they realized
- from refinancing their mortgages and are buying new cars at
- a rate that has led some U.S. car and truckmakers to add third
- shifts to meet the demand.
- </p>
- <p> The forecasters saw little risk that Clinton's $20 billion tax
- increase on the wealthy would slow the recovery this year. People
- whose tax rates jumped from 31% to 36% or 39.6% in 1993 will
- be able to pay the increase in three annual installments and
- thus lessen the bite. The economists also said the burden of
- higher taxes on the economy would be far outweighed by the benefits
- of falling oil prices and low interest rates. "The tax increase
- is easily absorbable and is not going to derail the economy,"
- said Meyer.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of their new spending power, bargain-hunting consumers
- will continue to reshape the retailing industry by flocking
- to such discounters as Wal-Mart and Price Club at the expense
- of traditional department stores. That in turn will help restrain
- price increases even as the economy expands.
- </p>
- <p> The forum expected inflation to hover around a mild 3% in 1994,
- which will be reminiscent of the price-stable 1960s. The big
- reason: wage hikes, the main ingredient in most price increases,
- will stay low as employers continue to cut labor costs. However,
- Donald Ratajczak, director of economic forecasting at Georgia
- State University, noted growing signs of labor unrest. "The
- American Airlines strike may have been a watershed," he said,
- referring to the Thanksgiving-week walkout by flight attendants,
- which ended when Clinton prodded the company to seek binding
- arbitration. "This is the beginning of intensifying wage pressures,
- or at least demands for retribution in the labor markets."
- </p>
- <p> With inflation under control, long-term interest rates should
- also remain near their current low levels. For example, mortgage
- rates that now stand at about 7% might reach no more than 7.5%
- by the end of the year. But short-term rates, which affect consumer
- loans and business borrowings, could rise more sharply as the
- Federal Reserve tightens the money supply to keep the recovery
- from overheating. David Jones, chief economist for Aubrey G.
- Lanston & Co., predicted that the prime rate, which banks charge
- large corporate customers, could climb a percentage point, to
- 7%. He added that a surge in short-term rates could jolt the
- stock and bond markets and send small investors scurrying back
- to dull but safer certificates of deposit.
- </p>
- <p> Panel members expected the quickening recovery to create jobs
- at an average rate of 170,000 a month in 1994, up from 160,000
- last year. But Freedman, a consultant to employers, predicted
- that the job-growth rate would climb to a more robust 200,000
- a month. As in 1993, much of the hiring will probably involve
- part-time positions and relatively low-wage, service-sector
- jobs like restaurant work. That should be enough to cut the
- unemployment rate, which stood at 6.4% in November, to 5.9%
- by the end of the year.
- </p>
- <p> The economists warned that some Clinton policies could act as
- a damper on new jobs. Jones noted that many operators of medium-size
- companies, which have traditionally been job creators, are "close
- to seething with anger" over proposals the Administration is
- pushing. Among them: levies on business to finance such programs
- as job training and health-care reform. Roach called such schemes
- "nothing more than a thinly veiled hiring tax."
- </p>
- <p> Another important variable is whether recent improvements in
- U.S. productivity will continue in 1994. Productivity, which
- measures the hourly output of workers, had increased less than
- 1% a year for most of the 1980s, hurting U.S. competitiveness.
- But productivity grew a healthy 1.5% last year, after surging
- about 3% in 1992, as downsized companies ran their plants and
- offices with fewer workers.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the economists agreed that the U.S. economy will continue
- to show solid growth over the next two years. Yet the timing
- of the economic cycle could cause trouble for Clinton if the
- aging recovery begins to fade in 1996 when he runs for a second
- term. "The problem for Bill Clinton is, we're going to have
- a good 1994 and a good 1995," Jones said. "But look out, Bill,
- for 1996." However, for Americans who have endured three years
- of the leanest economic recovery on record, the prospect of
- two reasonably fat years looks just fine, thank you.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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