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Hash: SHA1 On 30 Nov 2003 16:58:44 GMT, (Bobsprit) wrote: Remember they said the tax cuts would increase interest rates and kill the economy? Were they right about this? Nope. The economy is in awful shape, only showing "improvement" after huge losses and scaling back by nearly every major company. Everyone is in survival mode. The economic recovery is presently building on cuts, not profits. Care to examine the year for Walmart, Toys R Us or Merc? All slashed back to show even a break-even point. The low interest rates are a desperate measure, and not even the liberals predicted such a bad fall. RB Depends where you are. tw - ------------ http://www.cincypost.com/2003/11/29/purch112903.html Survey: Businesses here set for growth 11/29/2003 By Greg Paeth Post staff reporter The region's economy continued to expand in November, according to the latest snapshot from the area's businesses. Further, that expansion is expected to continue well into 2004, according to the survey. The flash poll of 50 businesses by the Cincinnati chapter of the National Association of Purchasing Management is the latest evidence that the region's economy is moving into an expansion mode along with the rest of the nation. The latest survey found 93 percent of respondents said new orders will increase for the first six months of 2004. Only 7 percent said orders would remain at current levels, and none said orders would decrease. There also was good news on the job front: 56 percent said they planned to increase employment while 44 percent said the number of jobs would remain constant. None predicted job cuts. Overall, the survey found that 73 percent of purchasing managers in the region believe their businesses will grow next year while only 6 percent predicted a decline. That figure is the second strongest forecast since the association began publishing its semi-annual forecasts in May, 1996. The strongest forecast was two years ago, two months after the terrorist attacks crippled some U.S. businesses and depressed stock prices. At that point, even the most pessimistic business owners couldn't see further room for decline. The survey also said that 87 percent of the purchasing managers said they would be spending more during the first half of 2004 while just 6 percent said their companies would buy less during that period. For the month of November, 11 of 12 indices the association tracks supported a business expansion trend. The only index that did not support expansion was the backlog of orders category, which showed no change from the previous month. The U.S. Commerce Department reported last week that gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic performance, increased at an annual rate of 8.2 percent during the third quarter. That revised growth rate was the strongest since the first quarter of 1984, a full percent higher than the previous month's first growth estimate and more than double the 3.3 rate for the second quarter of this year. - ------------ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQA/AwUBP8onVNCBA23eyf45EQJoOACeMaMy1G9Q2kquXJ0uuXaa6R U2IjAAoNDo gGMlAjEUC7/agnhIZGy5QyPB =HaJv -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#2
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predicted such a bad fall.
RB Depends where you are. NY, California, Tennessee and Texas...and all of the USA. These big companies are the US. If they fail, we fail. NY is a financial capital and it's still in trouble. RB |
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