Friday, September 04, 2009

You won't hear about this on the Sunday bobblehead Shows

From the WSJ: U.S. Economy Gets Lift From Stimulus

The U.S. economy is beginning to show signs of improvement, with many economists asserting the worst is past and data pointing to stronger-than-expected growth. On Tuesday, data showed manufacturing grew in August for the first time in more than a year. "There's a method to the madness. We're getting out of this," said Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at IHS Global Insight.

Much of the stimulus spending is just beginning to trickle through the economy, with spending expected to peak sometime later this year or in early 2010. The government has funneled about $60 billion of the $288 billion in promised tax cuts to U.S. households, while about $84 billion of the $499 billion in spending has been paid. About $200 billion has been promised to certain projects, such as infrastructure and energy projects.

Economists say the money out the door -- combined with the expectation of additional funds flowing soon -- is fueling growth above where it would have been without any government action.

Many forecasters say stimulus spending is adding two to three percentage points to economic growth in the second and third quarters, when measured at an annual rate. The impact in the second quarter, calculated by analyzing how the extra funds flowing into the economy boost consumption, investment and spending, helped slow the rate of decline and will lay the groundwork for positive growth in the third quarter -- something that seemed almost implausible just a few months ago. Some economists say the 1% contraction in the second quarter would have been far worse, possibly as much as 3.2%, if not for the stimulus.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The cash for clunkers did well, as a matter of fact too well the Jeep/Chrysler/Dodge ran out of inventory, and then GM, Ford, Toyota, Honda etc got business.
And the second dose of stimulas Cash for Clunker certainly helped more. It is a win/win helping car dealers, gettin gas guzzlers off the road lessening the foreign oil dependence. Putting more money into the economy. All kinds of positives, I think they should run another round after dealers have some inventory, I still see clunkers on the road.