Re: [ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

2010-01-29 Terurut Topik highwaystar91
Makanya, sapa suruh lihat harian pak? :p
Hehehe

Sent from my computer of course!

-Original Message-
From: Febry Hariyannugraha 
Date: Fri, 29 Jan 2010 10:11:01 
To: 
Subject: Re: [ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

Kemaren bilang jelek .. sekarang bilang bagus ..
Aduh . emang kalo ikutin berita harian bikin cape ...



Re: [ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

2010-01-29 Terurut Topik Febry Hariyannugraha
Kemaren bilang jelek .. sekarang bilang bagus ..
Aduh . emang kalo ikutin berita harian bikin cape ...


Re: [ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

2010-01-29 Terurut Topik Jacob Oen
This news looks very encouraging!.





From: victor_sperandeo 
To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Fri, January 29, 2010 9:24:50 PM
Subject: [ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

  
Economy grows for second straight quarter at 5.7 percent annual rate, fastest 
since 2003

By Christopher S. Rugaber, AP Economics Writer , On Friday January 29, 2010, 
8:57 am

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The economy grew for a second straight quarter from October 
through December, posting a better-than- expected 5.7 percent annual rate, the 
fastest quarterly pace since 2003.

The Commerce Department report is the strongest evidence to date that the worst 
recession since the 1930s ended last year, though an academic panel that dates 
recessions has yet to officially declare an end to it.

The two straight quarters of growth followed a record four quarters of decline. 
Still, the expansion in the fourth quarter was fueled by companies refilling 
depleted stockpiles, a trend that will eventually fade.

Growth exceeded expectations mainly because business spending on equipment and 
software jumped 13.3 percent -- much more than forecast.

The report provided an upbeat end to an otherwise dismal year: The nation's 
economy declined 2.4 percent in 2009, the largest drop since 1946.

Still, economists expect growth to slow this year as companies finish 
restocking inventories and as government stimulus efforts fade. Many estimate 
the nation's gross domestic product will slow to a 3 percent rate in the 
current quarter and to about 2.5 percent for 2010.

About 60 percent of the fourth quarter's growth resulted from a sharp slowdown 
in the reduction of inventories as firms began to rebuild stockpiles depleted 
by the recession.

Excluding inventory changes, the economy would have grown at a 2.2 percent 
clip, the government said. That's an improvement from 1.5 percent in the third 
quarter.

Besides business spending on equipment and software, also powering growth in 
the October-December period was consumer spending, which rose 2 percent.

A steep increase in exports also helped boost growth. The shipment of goods 
overseas rose 18.1 percent, far outpacing a 10.5 percent rise in imports.

Government spending was actually a slight drag on growth in the fourth quarter: 
A small increase in federal spending was outweighed by a drop in state and 
local spending.





  

[ob] (US) Economy grows at 5.7 pct pace, fastest since 2003

2010-01-29 Terurut Topik victor_sperandeo
Economy grows for second straight quarter at 5.7 percent annual rate, fastest 
since 2003

By Christopher S. Rugaber, AP Economics Writer , On Friday January 29, 2010, 
8:57 am

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The economy grew for a second straight quarter from October 
through December, posting a better-than-expected 5.7 percent annual rate, the 
fastest quarterly pace since 2003.

The Commerce Department report is the strongest evidence to date that the worst 
recession since the 1930s ended last year, though an academic panel that dates 
recessions has yet to officially declare an end to it.

The two straight quarters of growth followed a record four quarters of decline. 
Still, the expansion in the fourth quarter was fueled by companies refilling 
depleted stockpiles, a trend that will eventually fade.

Growth exceeded expectations mainly because business spending on equipment and 
software jumped 13.3 percent -- much more than forecast.

The report provided an upbeat end to an otherwise dismal year: The nation's 
economy declined 2.4 percent in 2009, the largest drop since 1946.

Still, economists expect growth to slow this year as companies finish 
restocking inventories and as government stimulus efforts fade. Many estimate 
the nation's gross domestic product will slow to a 3 percent rate in the 
current quarter and to about 2.5 percent for 2010.

About 60 percent of the fourth quarter's growth resulted from a sharp slowdown 
in the reduction of inventories as firms began to rebuild stockpiles depleted 
by the recession.

Excluding inventory changes, the economy would have grown at a 2.2 percent 
clip, the government said. That's an improvement from 1.5 percent in the third 
quarter.

Besides business spending on equipment and software, also powering growth in 
the October-December period was consumer spending, which rose 2 percent.

A steep increase in exports also helped boost growth. The shipment of goods 
overseas rose 18.1 percent, far outpacing a 10.5 percent rise in imports.

Government spending was actually a slight drag on growth in the fourth quarter: 
A small increase in federal spending was outweighed by a drop in state and 
local spending.