Feds now saying the "W" recession is likely

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Fed paints weaker picture of growth and employment

WASHINGTON – Federal Reserve officials have a slightly dimmer view of the economy than they did in April, reflecting worries about how the European debt crisis could affect U.S. growth and job prospects.

Fed officials said Wednesday in an updated economic forecast that they think the economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, will grow between 3 percent and 3.5 percent this year. That's a downward revision from a growth range in their April forecast of 3.2 percent to 3.7 percent.

The Fed's latest forecast sees the unemployment rate, now at 9.5 percent, possibly staying at that figure or in the best case falling to 9.2 percent. In the April forecast, the Fed had a slightly lower brabroad
tom number of 9.1 percent.

The Fed said in the minutes of its June 22-23 meeting that its lower economic projections reflected "economic developments abroad" — a reference to the debt crisis that began in Greece and threatened to spread to rabroad
her European countries.

While reducing the forecast for growth and employment, the Fed also saw less of a threat from inflation.

The Fed predicted that a key inflation gauge that's tied to consumer spending would show prices rising 1 percent to 1.1 percent this year. That's down from an April forecast that consumer prices would increase by 1.2 percent to 1.5 percent.

The absence of inflationary pressures gives the Fed leeway to keep interest rates low to try to bolster growth as the economy recovers from the deepest recession since the 1930s.

The new forecast was compiled at the last meeting of the Fed's interest rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee on June 22-23. At that meeting, the FOMC, which is composed of Fed board members and the 12 Fed regional bank presidents, kept a key rate at a record low of 0 to 0.25 percent, where it's been since December 2008.

The Fed's new forecast made only minor changes to its outlook for growth, unemployment and inflation. But those changes underscored a view that economic prospects were slightly weaker.

The factors the Fed cited were household and business uncertainty, weak real estate markets, a tough job market, waning fiscal stimulus and still-tight lending by banks.

The Fed in April had said only a minority of Fed officials thought it would take more than five or six years to reach the Fed's goals for maximum employment with low inflation. But in the new minutes, the Fed changed that to say that "most" expected it to take "no more than five or six years."

Beyond this year, the Fed forecast growth in 2011 to be in a range between 3.5 percent to 4.2 percent. The upper limit of that range was reduced from 4.5 percent in the April forecast.

The expectation for the unemployment rate next year was also nudged higher to a range of 8.3 percent to 8.7 percent. That was up from a range of 8.1 percent to 8.5 percent in April.

To obtain its forecast ranges, the Fed excludes the three highest and three lowest forecasts of Fed officials for each economic variable.


Of course it is in their best interest to try to spin this news in the best possible light, which means it's going to be even WORSE that they "predict".

We all know about their "predictions" ...



Brabroad
tom line, get ready for a bumpy decade and major unemployment and shit for value of the US dollar.
 
i have no idea how simius could have interpeted the "good luck" to be directed TOWARDS bush when hes the one smiling and waving... thats like bad picture comprehension
 
The American Middle Class is the backbone of society. It's mostly White and Christian, finances State and Federal Government through the taxes it pays, makes the economy viable, through the money it spends, earns, borrows and repays, and generally keeps the United States intact as a super-power nation. Without the Middle Class, America couldn't exist, as it's presently known.

Unfortunately, the Middle Class is shrinking, and bringing America to its knees, ever so slowly. Why? There are many reasons for the gradual disappearance of the American Middle Class. First, it isn't reproducing, due to its preference for individual freedom and materialism, as part of its still reasonably comfortable, collective, private life. Secondly, American society is being over-run by Third World indigents, mostly from Latin America, who, as a rapidly growing, dependent class, drain government resources, which the Middle Class can't afford to continue to finance. Lastly, much of the Middle Class is descending into the rank and file of the impoverished class, for a wide variety of reasons: race-mixing, abandonment of the Christian religion, bankruptcy through over-taxation, lack of incentive to work hard enough to remain Middle Class, etc.

To support the expanding number of indigents in the country, Government increases taxes on the Middle Class, with which it increasingly can't cope. A vicious-cycle-effect has settled in, by which the American Middle Class and American society at large, find themselves doomed. Enter political, and socio-economic stimulation of this process of national disintegration, on the part of the Democratic Party, especially under the current leadership of the unpatrirabroad
ic Obama Administration, and the story of the demise of the United States of America becomes the proverbial 'writing on the wall.'
 
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