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- <text id=93TT0444>
- <title>
- Nov. 01, 1993: Slipping Into Gear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 52
- Slipping Into Gear
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Slowly, but not so surely, the U.S. economy is starting to gain
- speed. But does it have the fuel to continue?
- </p>
- <p>By ADAM ZAGORIN/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> Few people are knocking at Robert Wescott's door these days
- to find out who might win the next presidential election. It's
- still too early for that. But the door knockers will be back.
- For Wescott, 38, a bespectacled forecaster recently named to
- a senior staff position on the President's Council of Economic
- Advisers, is the originator of an uncannily accurate political
- rule: the incumbent party wins re-election only if Americans'
- real disposable income grows at 3.7% or better during the 12
- months prior to Election Day. Anything below that, and it's
- curtain time.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton has two more years before Wescott's rule kicks
- in. Some recent signs suggest that the sputtering recovery might
- just be starting to hum. Inflation is down to a barely visible
- 2.5%, and low interest rates are going lower. Last week Morgan
- Guaranty and Harris Trust and Savings Bank dropped their prime
- lending rate half a percentage point, to 5.5%. Under Clinton,
- unemployment has also fallen, from 7% to 6.7%, with the economy
- generating an average of 152,000 new jobs each month--roughly
- twice 1992's pace. Stocks are up to record heights. Investment
- in plant and equipment is hitting levels not seen since 1984.
- Auto sales are at their highest since 1989; single-family housing
- starts are spurting. Says David Hale, chief economist at Kemper
- Financial Companies: "The U.S. economy appears poised for at
- least a temporary lift-off."
- </p>
- <p> But what about Wescott's yardstick? Despite the upbeat statistics,
- real disposable income inched ahead barely 2% over the past
- year. The ample supply of labor and efforts by companies to
- trim costs have held down wage and salary increases. "The United
- States is finally entering a period of sustained, moderate growth
- fueled by low interest rates," notes Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Clinton's
- chief economic adviser (and Wescott's new boss). "But we would
- still like to see higher employment, the creation of more permanent
- jobs and stronger American exports." Tyson is forecasting modest
- 3% growth in the inflation-adjusted gross domestic product for
- the remainder of this year and into next. The question is whether
- even that pace can be maintained.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly every positive sign of renewed growth turns out to have
- a negative catch. The good news on unemployment is more than
- tempered by the alarming persistence of long-term joblessness.
- "Even reasonably healthy companies are cutting their payrolls,"
- Labor Secretary Robert Reich said recently. "In September, American
- businesses were slashing jobs at the rate of more than 2,000
- a day--even though profits are rising." As the wave of corporate
- downsizing continues, some 20% of those unemployed have been
- out of work at least six months, twice the level of the 1970s.
- Even low interest rates have a downside: they not only hurt
- retirees and others living on investment income, but they also
- encourage millions of Americans to shift out of federally insured
- bank accounts and certificates of deposit into potentially more
- lucrative--and certainly more volatile--equities and mutual
- funds. The long predicted--and long postponed--stock market
- correction could hit personal savings hard.
- </p>
- <p> Recent indicators suggest the beginnings of the kind of spending
- spree that has powered previous recoveries. But will it last?
- The latest survey by the Conference Board, a business research
- group, found that Americans' intentions of buying a house, a
- car or a major appliance were weakening; one-third of those
- surveyed described business conditions as "bad," and that figure
- has barely changed since January. Expectant retailers are hoping
- consumers will be in a Christmas-spending mood to round out
- an otherwise unspectacular 1993.
- </p>
- <p> Another mixed blessing turns out to be Clinton's $500 billion
- deficit-reduction package. The measure's passage in August may
- have cleared the way for further cuts in interest rates, but,
- in the view of a number of economists, its combination of tax
- increases on those with the most disposable income and spending
- cuts could knock between a half and a full percentage point
- off U.S. growth over the next five years. And so far consumers
- have no way of knowing whether health-care reform will help
- or hurt their pocketbooks.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the same economic headaches that contributed to the
- demise of George Bush continue to nag the Clinton Administration.
- The biggest migraine is jobs. As with Bush, there may be little
- the new team can do. Measures that might be tried, like a reprise
- of the $15 billion White House stimulus package, lack support
- in Congress and probably wouldn't generate much growth anyhow.
- For a President whose promises of prosperity won him the White
- House, an improvement in Americans' spending power is an imperative.
- Mr. Wescott will be watching.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-