from the March 13, 2002 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0313/p01s01-usec.html

Economy in sudden acceleration
The poll's economic optimism index jumped to a strongly positive
62.9 as Americans eye a rebound.
By David R. Francis | Staff writer of The Christian Science
Monitor

In not much more than a week, perceptions of the US economy have
shifted decidedly, from glimmers of recovery to visions of
clear-cut growth.

Acceleration is the trend from the trading floor of the New York
Stock Exchange to the factory floors of General Motors.

The stock market has rediscovered the word "up." Unemployment
edged downward last month, defying most forecasts. And consumer
confidence rose solidly yesterday in a new Christian Science
Monitor/TIPP poll.

Debate among economists has shifted from when a recovery will
begin to how strong it will be. A few even question whether the US
really had a recession last year. (Only in the third quarter did
the economy actually shrink.) And while some forecasters say heavy
debts could restrain America's high-spirited consumers, others
talk of full-fledged 5 percent growth.

"The underlying trend of the economy is extremely positive," says
Brian Wesbury, chief economist of a Chicago brokerage firm. "It
could be another 10-year expansion."

Mr. Wesbury had been saying recovery would be slow in the first
half and strong in the second. Now he predicts a strong recovery
for the entire year, possibly above 4 percent.

Particularly encouraging, Wesbury says, are numbers showing an
upturn in the hard-hit manufacturing sector.

Consumers, too, sense better times ahead. The Monitor/TIPP poll,
conducted over the weekend, shows a sharp jump in its index of
economic optimism, which jumped to 62.9 from 60.4 in February and
from a low of 52.1 in a poll completed Sept. 9.

"Economic confidence is sweeping the nation, across all regions,
age groups, income levels, and party affiliations," says Raghavan
Mayur, president of TIPP, a unit of TechnoMetrica Market
Intelligence that conducted the poll. The poll, which surveyed 921
Americans, is the first broad indicator of consumer confidence
released each month.

Economists have a similar cheerier view. Federal Reserve chairman
Alan Greenspan, for example, sounded notably more upbeat in Senate
testimony last Thursday than he had in the House a week earlier.

"We have seen encouraging signs in recent days that underlying
trends [in demand for goods and services] are strengthening,
although the dimensions of the pickup remain uncertain," Mr.
Greenspan said.

Indeed, some say the economic engine could sputter as consumer
spending maxes out. But for now, those gloomier economists can
only apologize for missing the positive surprises.

"How could I be so stupid?" asks an embarrassed Stephen Roach,
chief economist in New York of Morgan Stanley in a Monday
commentary. He still sees himself as "the last living economist in
America" to talk of economic relapse later this year.

A host of numbers lifted the outlook of the economists.

Retail chains had their best month in two years in February, with
sales rising 6 percent from a year earlier. Worker productivity
continued its astonishing upsurge, rising at a 5.2 percent rate in
the fourth quarter of 2001.

Economists generally agree on why the upturn is occurring.

. The Fed cut interest rates 11 times last year, making many debts
easier to finance and bolstering home construction.

. Washington has conducted a stimulative fiscal policy. Within a
year, the federal budget has moved from a surplus of $255 billion
to a small deficit (or tiny surplus). Extra spending on national
security has helped boost economic output.

The passage by Congress of an economic-stimulus package last week
is generally seen as late, but an added 13 weeks of unemployment
insurance will help maintain the spending of the unemployed.

. Consumers kept up a buying spree. "We continue to do a great job
of living beyond our means," says David Wyss, chief economist at
Standard & Poor's. Consumers keep buying cars and furniture,
despite record debt levels and layoffs.

Most economists figure on the economic pace stepping up as the
year moves forward. But Susan Hickok, chief economist at
Prudential Economics in Newark, N.J., expects the Fed to start
raising interest rates as early as May to keep the recovery from
heating up so much that inflation could restart. Ms. Hickock has
been forecasting a 5 percent pace of recovery for months, far
above the average view.

A key measure of the nation's money supply, known as M2, stands 10
percent above what it was a year ago. That is considered rapid
growth. Money is the fuel for economic growth. Too much of it,
though, can fuel inflation rather than real growth.

Hickok suspects the Fed will gradually raise the "federal funds
rate," the rate at which banks loan money overnight to other
banks, from 1.75 percent to 4 percent. That rate she describes as
"normal" with inflation at 2 percent.

But for now, optimism reigns.

The economy is "picking up now," says Freddy Sanchez, a
participant in the Monitor/TIPP poll who works for Hyde Moulding
in Queens, New York. New orders for plaster mouldings have risen
with the vigor of housing construction across the country. "I like
Greenspan."

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