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Friday,
October 26, 2001
Economy
in recession as GDP, sales fall again
By
Martin Crutsinger
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Home sales and orders to factories for big-ticket items
plunged in September, and the number of Americans drawing
unemployment benefits now stands at an 18-year-high
the strongest evidence to date that the country has entered
a recession.
The
bad news just keeps on coming, said Melani Jani, an
economist at Salomon Smith Barney in New York. The economy
was already weak before Sept. 11, and these figures show the
deterioration has become much more intense.
The Commerce
Department reported Thursday that orders to factories for
big-ticket durable goods fell for a fourth consecutive month
in September, a decline of 8.5 percent that was six times
larger than economists expected. It pushed orders for durable
goods down to $165.4 billion, the lowest level since August
1996.
Sales
of existing homes, one of the economys few bright spots,
fell by 11.7 percent, the biggest one-month drop in six years,
the National Association of Realtors reported. The association
said the shock of the terrorist attacks caused housing sales,
along with a lot of other economic activity, to come to a
standstill.
The Labor
Department said the number of newly laid-off workers filing
for unemployment benefits rose to 504,000 last week, a level
usually associated with recessions, while the total number
of unemployed collecting benefits rose to an 18-year-high
of 3.65 million people, 66 percent above the level of a year
ago.
These
numbers leave no doubt that we are in a recession, said
Michael Evans, chief economist at American Economics Group,
a Washington-based consulting firm.
A final
report showed that Americans wages and benefits rose
by 4.1 percent in the 12 months ending in September, compared
to a 4.3 percent increase for the previous 12 months. Analysts
said that figure will decline even more sharply in coming
months as rising layoffs further depress employees bargaining
power.
Wall
Street posted sharp declines for most of the day on the bad
economic data, but then staged a late session rebound as investors
swooped in to grab bargains. The Dow Jones industrial average
closed up 117.28 points at 9,462.90.
A recession
is traditionally defined as two consecutive quarters of declining
economic output. The gross domestic product grew at a barely
discernible annual rate of 0.3 percent in the April-June quarter.
Many
analysts believe when the GDP figure for July-September quarter
is released Wednesday, it will show GDP falling at a rate
of around 1 percent with the decline expected to accelerate
to a 2 percent drop in the current quarter.
While
economists had been expecting a rebound early next year, many
said they are revising those forecasts down, in part because
of the new uncertainties raised by threats of anthrax and
other bioterror attacks.
Wyss
said he still believes economic activity will begin to rebound
in the first quarter, helped by an aggressive credit easing
on the part of the Federal Reserve and sizable tax cuts and
government spending increases. The Fed is expected to cut
rates for a 10th time this year at its next meeting, Nov.
6.
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