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Huge federal spending cuts could imperil recovery, economists say
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08-03-2011, 08:17 PM
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bapimporb
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Huge federal spending cuts could imperil recovery, economists say
How could laying off hundreds of thousands of people accomplish anything
other
than hurting the economy? The only thing it accomplishes is furthering the right-wing jihad against the U.S. government.
Boston Globe:
http://www.boston.com/business/artic...conomists_say/
The massive federal spending cuts that will follow the deficit reduction deal could further weaken a national economy that has been rapidly losing momentum, economists said.
While few forecast an imminent downturn, they said the withdrawal of hundreds of billions of federal dollars comes at a bad time. Over the past few months, hiring has ground almost to a halt, the unemployment rate has resumed an upward trend, and overall economic growth has been barely positive.
...
Stocks plunged yesterday on fears of a weakening economy, with the Dow Jones industrial average losing more than 265 points. It was the eighth consecutive day of declines, the longest losing streak since October 2008, during the financial crisis.
Persistently high unemployment above 9 percent and a fear of additional job losses also weigh heavily on consumers, who dramatically reined in their spending; between May and June, the nation’s savings rate rose from 5.0 to 5.4 percent. The weak economy, further hurt by a stagnating housing market, has raised concerns that the nation could slip into a second, or double-dip, recession.
...
Gary Richardson, an economist at the University of California at Irvine and a scholar of the era, said
unemployment rates soared to 19 percent in the year after the Roosevelt administration raised taxes and cut government spending and contracts as a way to solve the country’s long-term deficit problem
.
“Sadly in the last three days we have repeated the biggest policy mistake of the Roosevelt administration . . . cutting government expenditures in the midst of prolonged high unemployment,’’ he said. “It’s certainly not going to help the recovery.’’
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