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Business Title: Obamonomics Working -ODS's In Mourning By Timothy R. Homan Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The economy in the U.S. expanded in the fourth quarter at the fastest pace in six years as factories cranked up assembly lines to prevent inventories from plunging. The 5.7 percent increase in gross domestic product, which exceeded the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, marked the best performance since the third quarter of 2003, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. A smaller decrease in stockpiles contributed 3.4 percentage points to GDP, the most in two decades. Manufacturers such as Intel Corp. may keep leading the recovery as increasing sales prompt companies to restock. A slowdown in consumer spending last quarter is a reminder that 10 percent unemployment is causing Americans to hold back, one reason why the Federal Reserve is keeping interest rates low and the Obama administration is proposing new plans to create jobs. Business are now feeling confident enough to deploy a larger portion of the recent strong corporate earnings rebound into new investment spending, Brian Bethune, chief financial economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts, said before the report. This is a key development to support a strong, non-inflationary recovery. The economy was forecast to grow at a 4.7 percent annual pace, according to the median estimate of 84 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from gains of 3 percent to 7.5 percent. For all of 2009, the economy shrank 2.4 percent, the worst single-year performance since 1946. Consumer Slowdown Consumer spending, which comprises about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 2 percent pace, more than anticipated following a 2.8 percent increase in the previous three months. Economists projected a 1.8 percent gain, according to the survey median. Third-quarter purchases received a boost from the governments auto-incentive program that offered buyers discounts to trade in older cars and trucks for new, more fuel- efficient vehicles. The plan expired in August. Household purchases dropped 0.6 percent last year, the biggest decrease since 1974. Increases in production last quarter stemmed the slide in inventories. Stockpiles dropped at a $33.5 billion annual pace following a $139.2 billion decline the previous three months. Inventories declined at a record $160.2 billion pace in the second quarter. Investment Pickup Todays report showed purchases of equipment and software increased at a 13 percent pace in the fourth quarter, the most since 2006. The gain helped offset a 15 percent drop in commercial construction, leaving total business investment up 2.9 percent over the past three months. Intel, the worlds largest chipmaker, posted its biggest quarterly revenue in more than a year last quarter, a sign the computer industry has emerged from last years global recession. My expectation for 2010 is that were going to see robust unit growth, Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith said in an interview this month. The consumer segments of the market will stay pretty strong, and I do believe were going to see a resurgence in PC client sales. A report yesterday showed companies ordered more capital goods such as machinery and computers in December, indicating business investment will keep expanding. Job Losses Jobs is one area where a rebound is still not evident. Payrolls fell by 85,000 last month after a 4,000 gain in November that was the first increase in almost two years. The U.S. has lost 7.2 million since the start of the recession in December 2007, the most of any slowdown in the post-World War II era. The jobless rate held at 10 percent in December, the Labor Department said on Jan. 8. A jump in the number of discouraged workers leaving the labor market kept the rate from rising. President Barack Obama this week said job creation will be the number one focus in 2010. Speaking during his first State of the Union address, Obama called on Congress to deliver a new jobs bill to his desk. Fed policy makers, after their meeting this week, said the recovery is gaining strength and business investment appears to be picking up. They also repeated a pledge to keep the benchmark interest rate low for an extended period. The central bankers held the overnight lending rate between banks i the range near zero, where it has been for more than a year. In other areas of the economy, todays report showed a smaller trade gap contributed 0.5 percentage point to fourth- quarter growth, while government spending was little changed, dropping at a 0.2 percent pace. Home Construction Residential construction climbed at a 5.7 percent rate las quarter after expanding at a 19 percent pace in the previous three months. Inflation held below the Feds long-term forecast. The central banks preferred price gauge, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, rose at a 1.4 percent annual pace following a 1.2 percent increase in the prior quarter. The GDP price gauge climbed at a 0.6 percent pace, less than the 1.3 percent median forecast of economists surveyed. Todays GDP report is the first for the quarter and will be revised in February and March as more information becomes available.
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Only republicans - those declared and in denial (laughing) - and fools bet against the US economy...(laughing)
How much of this do you believe is a result of borrow and spend, print and spend?
Whatever portion you wish to assign to the stim...what BOTS won't tell you about he GDP number is that the consumer spent in 4Q in a way unrelated to the stim.
How so?
Auto sales, i.e. the end of cash for clunkers, subtracted .6 from consumer purchases q4.
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