The economy will grow 3 percent this
year, which is less than usual during
the early phase of a recovery and the
reason unemployment will stay high. It
takes growth of 5 percent for a year to
lower the jobless rate by 1 percentage
point, economists say.
The economy began growing again last
summer, 18 months after the recession
started in December 2007. To keep the
recovery on track, the soonest the
Federal Reserve will begin raising
short-term interest rates is the fourth
quarter, 34 of the 44 economists
surveyed told the AP.
Those continued low rates will help
stimulate home sales.
More foreclosures expected
Economists think sales of previously
occupied homes, the biggest chunk of the
market, will tick up to 5.4 million this
year and to 5.9 million in 2011. That
would mark continued improvement from
the low of 4.9 million in 2008 and be in
line with sales in a healthy economy.
But there's a catch. Sales are forecast
to rise in part because of another
anticipated wave of foreclosures. That
will keep prices from rising — and
consumers from spending freely.
Still, a glut of homes already for sale
and another anticipated wave of
foreclosures will keep prices from
rising — and consumers from spending
freely. Surging home equity spurred
spending during the housing boom of the
last decade.
"Our houses are no longer cash
machines," says Allen Sinai, chief
economist at Decision Economics, who
took part in the AP survey.
By keeping interest rates at record
lows, the Fed intends to encourage
people and companies to spend more and
invigorate the recovery. But anxiety
over unemployment, and a reluctance or
inability to borrow, will also restrain
consumer spending, economists say.
"We're not going to see any irrational
exuberance from consumers this year,"
says Joel Naroff, president of Naroff
Economic Advisors, another survey
participant.
Like many Americans, Michaela O'Brien of
Northampton, Mass., is trying to cope
with personal damage from the worst
recession since the 1930s. O'Brien's
husband, Nathaniel Reade, 51, lost his
job two years ago as a magazine editor.
Since then, they've seen the value of
their home slip. So they're spending
less.
Gone are the health club memberships,
ski passes and camp for their two
children. "We mostly cut back on what
people would consider frivolous things,"
O'Brien says.
She gets around in a 2000 Toyota
Corolla, her husband in a 13-year old
Subaru.
"We hope we don't have to buy a car
anytime soon," says O'Brien, 49, a
self-employed publicist. Still, she says
they are fortunate because they're able
to pay their mortgage.
Scarred labor market
Economists say it may take until at
least the middle of the decade for home
values to return to full health. The
biggest asset for many Americans, homes
have appreciated an average 4 percent a
year since World War II, economists say.
But national house prices have never
remained flat while the economy was
growing, says Mark Zandi, chief
economist of Moody's Analytics, which
reviewed data going back to 1969.
Adjusted for inflation, however, home
prices were essentially flat throughout
the 1980s and the first half of the
1990s, says Zandi, who also took part in
the survey.
The recession wiped out 8.2 million
jobs. Zandi and other economists had
previously forecast that unemployment,
which reached 10.1 percent in October,
would peak at 11 percent this year.
Zandi now expects joblessness to climb
again and reach 10.2 percent by
December. That's because people who have
quit looking for work and aren't counted
as unemployed will start looking again,
and because job creation will remain
weak.
Employers have begun to add jobs
recently, including 162,000 in March.
Economists foresee additional job
creation over the next three months, but
not enough to reduce the unemployment
rate significantly. They predict job
gains of roughly 200,000 in April,
250,000 in May and 125,000 in June.
About 125,000 new jobs are needed each
month just to keep up with population
growth and prevent the unemployment rate
from rising. To reduce the jobless rate
significantly, employers would need to
consistently add 200,000 to 300,000 each
month.
"The labor market is the scar left over
from the economic trauma that we've been
through," says Sean Snaith, economics
professor at the University of Central
Florida, who took part in the survey.
"It will be slow to fade."
Forty-year-old Ann DeRoo of Fairfield,
Ohio, began digging into savings to pay
home and car loans after her husband was
laid off from a trucking job earlier
this year. DeRoo, who has three
children, has also put off buying new
clothes or shoes. Her son, who graduates
from college in June, may have to move
back home if he can't find a job.
"We just have to really watch what we're
doing and worry about getting through
today," DeRoo says.