I like this article because it concentrates on fundamental truths -- economies do recover, sometimes with surprising gusto.
From the Wall Street Journal, 7-23-09 by Alan S. Blinder
"How’s the economy, you ask? I have the proverbial good news and bad news, but in this case, they’re exactly the same: The U.S. economy appears to be hitting bottom.
First, the good news. Right now, it looks like second-quarter GDP growth will come in only slightly negative, and third-quarter growth will finally turn positive. Compared to the catastrophic decline we recently experienced—with GDP dropping at roughly a 6% annual rate in the fourth quarter of last year and the first quarter of this year—that would be a gigantic improvement.
Furthermore, there is a reasonable chance—not a certainty, mind you, but a reasonable chance—that the second half of 2009 will surprise us on the upside. (Can anyone remember what an upside surprise feels like?) Three-percent growth is eminently doable. Four percent is even possible. Surprised? How, with all our economic travails, could we possibly mount such a boom? The answer is that this seemingly high growth scenario isn’t a boom at all. Rather, it follows directly from the arithmetic of hitting bottom."
For the entire article: http://tinyurl.com/msbhcj The link works only for a few days. If you can't access the article, let me know and I will try to gain access for another short period. rich.chambersABC@gmail.com Spam prevention: Remove the ABC from the email address.
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