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U.S. Economy To Gain Momentum Next Year Amid European Recession

Manufacturing

First Posted: 12/23/11 08:42 AM ET Updated: 12/23/11 08:42 AM ET

The U.S. economy is gaining momentum and should push through next year with only a few bruises despite an almost certain European recession and slower global growth.

A firming in the anaemic U.S. labour market should put the economy in reasonable shape to withstand headwinds from overseas, although the recovery will likely slow at the start of the year after a surprisingly solid fourth quarter.

"The U.S. economy will be one of the better stories in an otherwise gloomy global economy next year," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University in the Channel Islands. "It will not go into recession."

Data from employment to manufacturing imply U.S. growth will top a 3 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, which would be the fastest pace in 18 months.

Much of that expansion reflects the release of pent-up demand for autos and a restocking of inventories by businesses, temporary factors that could lead to a lull early in 2012.

But a healing labour market provides a signal of a more-lasting and fundamental strengthening of the recovery.

The jobless rate fell to a 2-1/2 year low of 8.6 percent in November and first-time claims for jobless benefits have dropped to the lowest level since early 2008.

That's good news for the consumers who drive two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.

"The consumer is going to be able to spend simply because job growth is picking up," said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania. "As job growth picks up, income picks up."

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Graphic on China, euro zone and U.S. GDP growth:

link.reuters.com/ped75s

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RECOILING FROM EUROPE

Many economists now look for growth of between 2.3 percent and 3 percent in 2012, even given the clouds overseas.

While far from stellar, that would mark an acceleration from an expected 2 percent expansion this year and it could offer some mild relief to President Barack Obama, whose handling of the economy is key to his re-election hopes.

The debt crisis in Europe and bickering over budget policy in Washington are the biggest threats.

"The key question is whether the economy will be allowed to run on its own internal dynamics," said Anthony Karydakis, chief economist at Commerzbank in New York.

A political stand-off over extending an expiring payroll tax cut and benefits for the long-term unemployed had raised the risk a fiscal brake would abruptly slow the economy at the start of the new year.

However, lawmakers on Thursday announced an agreement to continue the provisions for two months, setting up a decisive vote in the House of Representatives on Friday.

The action looks set to push the political brinkmanship into February, offering a temporary reprieve for the economy. Analysts warned that a failure to renew the measures could chop up to 1.5 percentage points off growth, raising recession risks.

As for Europe, economists expect just a mild downturn. A deep one could push up the value of the dollar and put a big pinch on exports.

As it is, a slower global expansion is already likely to take the shine off exports, though they account for only about 13 percent of U.S. gross domestic product. The euro zone's share of that slice is about 13 percent.

"Even assuming an incredibly dire scenario where import growth in the euro zone tumbled by 10 percent, the impact on U.S. GDP growth would be negligible," said Michelle Girard, a senior economist at RBS in Stamford, Connecticut.

For U.S. multinational manufacturers like General Electric Co and Emerson Electric Co, Europe is the biggest worry and they are already reducing their footprints on the continent.

"The reality (is) that Europe is in a recession and could be in a recession for most of 2012," said Emerson Chief Executive Dave Farr. In contrast, the St. Louis-based company said it sees healthy U.S. demand.

Concerns over Europe have also led financial analysts to scale back profit expectations.

Earnings for firms in the Standard & Poor's 500 index are seen growing 5.8 percent in the first quarter of the next year, down sharply from a forecast of more than 10 percent in October and much slower than the 18 percent growth logged in the third quarter, according to Thomson Reuters Proprietary Research.

FINANCIAL MARKETS MELTDOWN

The gravest European threat lies outside of exports and in the financial sector. But most economists do not believe the euro zone debt crisis will spark a crisis in the United States.

"If you stabilize the financial sector and you don't have the kind of financial crisis we had in 2008, why do we have to have the economy we had in 2009?" asked Naroff.

With the U.S. economy poised for steady growth, many analysts have set aside earlier expectations that the Federal Reserve will launch a further round of asset purchases.

"I think they will be on hold for a while, unless something happens in Europe and signs of a slowdown in the U.S. emerge again," said Adolfo Laurenti, deputy chief economist, Mesirow Financial in Chicago.

Of course, not everyone is so sanguine. For example PIMCO, the home of the world's largest bond fund, expects growth no better than 1 percent and perhaps no expansion at all.

But there are signs of life even in the depressed U.S. housing market, where building could contribute to growth for the first time since 2005.

In addition, state and local government revenues are starting to trend higher, which should allow them to spend a bit after a long period of belt-tightening.

Business spending could soften somewhat, although analysts do not expect a sharp pull back given that corporations are sitting on about $2 trillion (1.27 trillion pounds) in cash.

"With that amount of liquidity, you would expect some contribution to growth from continued capital spending," said Commerzbank's Karydakis.

(Additional reporting by Scott Malone in Boston; Editing by Tim Ahmann and Dan Grebler)

BUSINESS


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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The U.S. economy is gaining momentum and should push through next year with only a few bruises despite an almost certain European recession and slower global growth. A firming in the anaemic U.
The U.S. economy is gaining momentum and should push through next year with only a few bruises despite an almost certain European recession and slower global growth. A firming in the anaemic U.
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oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
10:36 PM on 12/23/2011
inaction from congress is getting good results...a drop in unemployment numbers and business confidence that we wont have any more hairbrained bills.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
10:08 PM on 12/23/2011
Our greedy Ruling Class, Corporations, Wall Street firms and banks created the whole problem and collapse of economies around the world. Then we get told in our media that Europe problems are dragging us down, and now how we are so much better than they are. Ironic really. We caused the whole problem, and now we are not only blaming everyone else, we are insisting we are better than everyone else too. Its the American Way.
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
10:37 PM on 12/23/2011
get used to mega-corps as long as we have a death tax....its nearly impossible to pass larger small businesses from generation to generation.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:03 PM on 12/24/2011
whats the starting point on the so called Death tax,, really called Inheritance tax but propaganda machine likes to scare people so Death is used by the far right.. Oh, I think its 5 million before you have to pay any death tax.. And if your company is over that amount, and your still a private and not incorporated, well whose fault is that? Thousands of very rich people legally avoid what you call the Death Tax Evey year, and if you cant figure out how to do that, you dont have a right to complain about it. Unless your just regurgitating the Right wing propaganda so they can get votes.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
02:03 PM on 12/24/2011
Roughly 33,500 estates filed returns in 2009 but fewer than half—only 14,700—of those estates had to pay any estate tax at all. Estate tax liability totaled $20.6 billion.
Estates must file tax returns within nine months of the decedent’s death and taxable estates usu-ally wait as long as possible before filing. Thus, most returns filed in 2009 were for people dying in 2008 when the estate tax exemption was $2 million. About 2.4 million people died in that year; of those, only 1 in 73 generated an estate tax return and only 1 in 166 had to pay any es-tate tax.
The 2010 act also allowed estates of people dying in 2010 to choose between the 2010 law with no estate tax but with limited step-up in basis and the 2011-2012 law with a $5 million exemp-tion, 35 percent tax rate, and full step-up in basis1. For some estates, getting step-up in basis for all assets can make it worthwhile to pay some estate tax.
After a single year hiatus in 2010, the estate rate will return in 2011 with a $5 million exemption. TPC projects that 8,600 estate tax returns will be filed for people who died in that year, of which only 3,300 will owe estate tax totaling about $10.6 billion.
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/key-elements/estate/how-many.cfm
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
03:00 PM on 12/23/2011
I know things are getting better when I AM back to work!
12:45 PM on 12/23/2011
There several factors militating against the rosier scenarios for us: growing long term unemployed, fewer layoffs but stagnant hiring, stagnant middle class wages, slowing in growth in the health care industry, and continued erosion of some critical sectors to globalization like manufacturing. Another worry is that a number of our large wobbly banks are exposed to the toxic euro debt problems through European banks.
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HMDMSR
Workers of the world, unite!
10:19 AM on 12/23/2011
What undiluted propaganda.

The US is stuck on a 40 year secular decline, which was somewhat mitigated by a matching trend line of growing debt.

Real unemployment is still high; wages are depressed; work has intensified; retirement will be put off for most of the workforce, or it won't happen at all. And, still, the economy hasn't corrected down for all the lost retail sales that can't happen due to the permanent debt holiday so many Americans will spend the rest of their lives on.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
10:17 PM on 12/23/2011
The only thing I would like to add to your excellent post is that much of the debt the US gov is in, was because of the ever increasing unregulated contracts with private companies. Many who didnt hire Americans to do the work we Americans were paying for, and charged insane prices for many times shoddy products and services, sometimes, completely imaginary ones. But not only does our Gov pay them, they continue to hire them even after they are caught committing fraud against the gov for several billions a year. To put the cherry on top of the cake, these same private corporations have lobbyist pay politicians to make sure they get the contracts at the prices they demand. And they get it. We owe a lot of these problems to the ruling class puppet politicians, and private corporations who have access to the puppets strings The US Gov does nothing, passing no laws or rules, without the full blessing the Oligarchs who pay them.
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gravescanada
Bipolar-Playing life on hard mode!
07:46 AM on 12/24/2011
Spot on Loki, clever comment! F&F