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Slow growth, but no recession, seen for 2008

Economists offer sobering outlook in msnbc.com year-end survey

ANALYSIS
By John W. Schoen
Senior Producer
MSNBC
updated 8:26 a.m. ET Dec. 19, 2007

John W. Schoen
Senior Producer

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With the housing market still in decline and consumers tightening their belts, the economy is likely to slow substantially in the coming year but will skirt an all-out recession. That, at least, is the consensus view of economists polled for msnbc.com’s sixth year-end economic roundtable.

While the 10 forecasters on our panel believe the economy will avoid a recession, much depends on how the Federal Reserve responds, how many more homeowners get swamped by higher mortgage payments and whether oil prices stay below $100 a barrel.

After shrugging off the housing recession over the summer, the economy has showed clear signs of slowing over the past three months. On average the panelists on our roundtable expect the economy to show growth of just 0.6 percent in the current quarter and 1.2 percent in the first quarter.

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That feels like slamming on the brakes after surprisingly strong growth of 4.9 percent in the third quarter, a figure that may have reflected an inventory buildup that is unlikely to be completed.

Employers continued to add jobs at a healthy pace in November but are getting more cautious about their hiring plans. Fewer than a quarter of employers say they plan to add jobs in the first quarter of 2008, according to a survey of 14,000 companies by Milwaukee-based global staffing firm Manpower Inc. released earlier this month.

The relatively strong labor market, including continued wage overall gains, has helped blunt the impact of the painful housing downturn. A weaker dollar has helped boost exports. And manufacturers haven’t staffed up as much since the last recession, in 2001, as they have in the past, according to Ed Leamer, forecast director at the UCLA Anderson School of Business.

“We just don’t see the manufacturing sector losing enough jobs for it to be a real recession,” he said.

  Special report
This is the sixth annual year-end edition of the msnbc.com economic roundtable. Click on the items below to learn more.
Because consumer spending makes up some 70 percent of U.S. economic activity, a lot depends on how well household budgets hold up. With home prices stagnant or falling in some areas, many homeowners are no longer able to tap rising equity to fund their spending.

“People are beginning to recognize the wealth gains in the housing market are disappearing,” said Ethan Harris, chief U.S. economist at Lehman Bros. “And with a lag they tend to adjust their spending habits.”

There are signs consumers are already pulling back. Auto sales slumped in November, and some automakers and analysts predict sales in 2008 could drop to their lowest level in a decade. though retail sales were relatively strong in Novermber, it's not clear whether holiday shopping will hold up through December and January.

And with some 2 million homeowners facing higher mortgage payments in the next few years, it remains to be seen how big an impact those higher costs will have on overall consumer spending. The White House this month unveiled a plan to try to head off a rising wave of defaults and foreclosures. Bur critics say it doesn’t go far enough to stem a looming consumer credit crunch.

By freezing adjustable rates for five years, the plan simply postpones the problem that will hit the economy when mortgage rates “reset" to levels that borrowers can’t handle, according to Merrill Lynch chief North American economist David Rosenberg.

“We are far from confident this plan is going to be (an) effective cure for a credit crisis that has now spread far beyond the subprime loan market,” Rosenberg wrote shortly after the plan was announced. “It is now spreading to prime mortgages, commercial real estate, auto finance and credit cards.”


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