Mon, May 28, 2012, 11:41 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Forecasters see only moderate US growth in 2012-13

University of Michigan forecasters expect only moderate US economic growth in next 2 years

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LANSING, Mich. (AP) -- The U.S. economy should grow only moderately over the next two years, generating just enough jobs to slowly reduce unemployment, University of Michigan economists said Thursday.

The reserved assessment comes with the nation grappling with a sluggish job market and still-moribund housing market. Motor vehicle sales provide a bright spot, as the economists expect foreign and domestic automakers to sell nearly a million more cars and trucks next year.

"Job gains have picked up a notch, consumer sentiment has recouped about half the ground lost this summer and the chances of another downturn have diminished," economist Joan Crary said in a statement. "History shows, however, that it is much more difficult to recover after a financial crisis like the Great Recession than it is after a more typical recession, and policymakers are still struggling with ways to restore balance to the economy."

The annual economic forecast said that economic output growth should be about 2.5 percent in both 2012 and 2013, up from this year's projected rate of 1.8 percent. The national jobless rate should drop from 9 percent now to 8.8 percent in late 2012 and to 8.5 percent in late 2013, forecasters said.

"It seems likely that the path of this recovery will continue to be a marathon, not a sprint," Crary said.

The economists will release their forecast for Michigan's economy on Friday.

The forecast expects light vehicle sales to hit 12.7 million this year, compared to 11.6 million last year. It expects sales to pick up to 13.5 million units in 2012 and 14.3 million in 2013.

Domestic automakers already are announcing new hiring as they ramp up to meet increased demand. On Wednesday, Chrysler Group LLC announced it planned to add 1,100 jobs by late 2013 in Toledo as part of a $1.7 billion investment to build a new Jeep sports utility vehicle. General Motors Co. said last month it planned to add jobs at a Warren transmission plant.

The economic forecasts says the troubled housing market isn't expected to come out of its slump anytime soon, as still-falling prices are discouraging buyers from getting into the market. The forecast expects any growth in existing home sales over the next two years to be "extremely weak."

It also said both inflation and interest rates will remain fairly low over the next two years. Despite a rise in oil prices, consumer price inflation is projected to drop from 3.2 percent this year to about 2 percent.

Economist Daniil Manaenkov said it's tough to judge what will happen economically when the political situation is so volatile in Washington, D.C. Congress is considering deep cuts in federal spending as well as possible tax increases, but Democrats and Republicans remain at odds over a solution, even as a debt supercommittee heads into its last week to forge an agreement.

"The course of the economy over the next two years will be influenced by how Congress chooses to deal with the budget both in the near and longer term, what new tools, if any, the Federal Reserve chooses to employ to support additional growth, and how the economics of Europe and other trading partners fare," Manaenkov said.

The forecast was compiled by the university's Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics.

___

Online:

Forecast summary: http://www.umich.edu/~rsqe

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Follow Kathy Barks Hoffman on Twitter (at)kathybhoffman

 

64 comments

  • A Nonymous  •  6 months ago
    Bro, I wishes I was smokin what they be smokin. Must be some powerfully good $#!t.
  • Guest  •  6 months ago
    How much skoolin' do U ned to be awsum forcastr lik thm?
  • rich c  •  6 months ago
    Why does the press and our sloppy goverment still call this economy THE GREAT RECESSION when it is truely another modern day Depression. Guess it makes them fill better to lie than face facts and as for growth in 2012-2013 think again folks.
    • fififi 6 months ago
      Read up on The Great Depression, no comparison although this is painful.
  • Harold  •  6 months ago
    Since they always try to #$%$ people... it's obvious that we won't see any growth in 2012. We have a good chance of seeing contraction. Means deeper and deeper in recession. US cuts the budget. Economy will be straight into a recession.
    • fififi 6 months ago
      No one really knows what will happen, but now we are not in a recession if you know anything about the economy or how it is measured.
  • JIM  •  6 months ago
    Wonder how much AP got paid to pump this lie?
    • * 6 months ago
      Are you that educated that it has made you STUPID!
      If you keep putting down wall street
      We are DOOMED!
      Main Street is SCREWED!
      Wall Street is your Mothers and Fathers investment!
      The Inside Traders Are The Ones At Fault YOU the young are stealing with the computer trading!
  • H  •  6 months ago
    If I was attending this school, I'd ask for a full refund since their professors are high on crack.
  • TawnyAngel88  •  6 months ago
    O'Bumbah the fk A Hole is a total disaster and a total failure.
  • Super Poor  •  6 months ago
    Just move closer to DC. No recession, depression or any other economic ailment to be worried about.
    • Sunny 6 months ago
      On the capitol, WH, or K street.
    • fififi 6 months ago
      Has ever been thus...
  • John Smith  •  6 months ago
    " Moderate growth " ? I see the opposite .... everything is worse and getting worse than in 2008 .
  • Steven  •  6 months ago
    This forecast has no value given the high levels of risk and the worldwide instability and corruption in governments. The slightest glitch could panick the markets and set back growth for years. It has nothing to do with Obama whose cabinet has done more to solve the problem than the do-nothing congress.
  • jaguar  •  6 months ago
    Listen, the Farmer's Almanac can predict weather in advance. Our congress can predict their pay raises and taxes in advance. Why then do you believe the economic forecasters can predict the ups & downs of ours and the world economy? What do they base those facts on?
    Then, when it doesn't turn out the way they predict, it's the market correcting itself, or someone read the numbers wrong, or the presenter didn't comprehend the curves. Let's face it, our Govt. has no clue....even though history repeats itself, they still can't jump out of the way of that speeding train called disaster. Years ago, say 1950, we were just starting to recover from the war. Things were going well, people were working, buying houses, cars and saving money...Too Good To Fast and nobody thought of the future...well, guess what, this is the future, this is the time to pay for all those good (?) years when numbers climbed, profits were high, commissions were handed out like candy.....what could go wrong? The answer, everything! The price of greed is extreamly high and we the people will have to pay the price....Now that modern technology has rooted, the need for labor has dwindled, leaving many without an income and wards of the state. It doesn't matter who gets into office, we'll just have to ride this situation out. It may takes years. But the face of the future will not be what it was.....We can only hope that education will be available to the masses and no one will be left behind. Of course this is only my opinion, what's yours?
  • An American  •  6 months ago
    BUT worry not big oil and swpeculators will continue their HUGE price increases like they have the last two years of NO real growth.
  • Frodo Baggins  •  6 months ago
    I see dead people...
  • 01010110  •  6 months ago
    Read the "Coming New Dark Ages: The Truth About the U.S. Economy" to see why the debts of the world's advanced economies can be reconciled only by default, regardless of fiscal or monetary policies.
  • Harold  •  6 months ago
    Growth my #$%$...Europe is going to be hit hard first and then it will be US. Investors will first flee to US, but they will see how big our debt is in this country.
  • Running Elk  •  6 months ago
    Greed heads jacking up price of oil, gas, everything, look for economy to nosedive back into recession by the beginning of 2012. The only thing that will prevent this is a big drop in oil prices, organized crime (a.k.a. Goldman Sachs) will not let that happen.
  • Jim  •  6 months ago
    Ha, not according to the pumping ponzi lying risk promoting and inflation promoting FED!
  • Alan  •  6 months ago
    More regulation is needed not less. Wall Street is to blame for this debacle. When housing equity spiked..investors took it to the stock market..just like they did in 1929. The market then..and..now was unable to translate the new capital into more economy..!
  • Executive Decision  •  6 months ago
    To that ANALyst that keeps saying . . "this isn't 2008", you're right, there's a whole new bunch of thieves on the scene.
  • TawnyAngel88  •  6 months ago
    Anyone with any street sense and access to any street news would know for sure that the economy is not growing. It is actually shrinking.

    The forecasters have to tell some soothsaying news to justify their charge numbers.

    Their jobs should have been eliminated to save some money paying back our national debts.
 
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