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To: BushCountry
It is the synergistic effect of all the good news lately. The sum is much greater than the whole. The economy is on the mend, only the blind would denied it.

The numbers are looking up in almost every other regard, in fact, it is projected that the increase in GDP will be around 6.5%. Company profits are up, durable goods are up, stock market up, tax rebates are in the mail, consumer confidence up, home sales up, consumer and business spending up, etc...

Businesses, which cut spending on equipment and software in the first three months of this year, boosted such investment in the second quarter at a sizable 7.5 percent rate. That marked the biggest increase in three years.

After six straight quarters of slashing spending on new plants, office buildings and other structures, businesses boosted this spending by 4.8 percent in the second quarter.

The US service sector surprised experts with a fourth consecutive month of growth in July that helped fan hopes of a recovery, according to Institute for Supply Management.

Demand for U.S. manufactured goods rose at the sharpest rate in three months in June as a solid rise in orders for long-lasting items joined with a small gain in demand for other goods, the government said Monday.

A recent survey shows that the percentage of CEOs saying they're worse off now than they were 6 months ago has dropped from 51% to 26%.

Americans applied for mortgages to buy homes in near-record numbers the first week in August. Applications for mortgages to buy homes rose 6.9 percent in the week ended Aug. 1 to their second highest level on record.

America's business productivity soared in the second quarter of 2003 and new claims for unemployment benefits dropped to a six-month low last week, a double dose of good news as the economy tries to get back to full throttle. Productivity - the amount that an employee produces per hour of work - grew at an annual rate of 5.7 percent in the April to June quarter, the best showing since the third quarter of 2002, the Labor Department reported Thursday. That marked an improvement from the 2.1 percent growth rate in productivity posted in the first three months of this year.

Companies' unit labor costs, meanwhile, fell at a rate of 2.1 percent in the second quarter, boding well for profit margins. That compared with a 2 percent rate of increase in the first quarter.

Retailers sales were above expectations for many merchants, even the struggling department store sector. As retailers reported their sales results Thursday, all industry segments appeared to benefit from an improved selling environment. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the industry leader, boosted its profit outlook for the second quarter. J.C. Penney Co. Inc., Kohl's Corp. and Gap Inc. were among the retailers reporting sales that beat analysts' forecasts. Even May Department Stores Co., which has struggled with sales declines, eked out a solid increase in sales at stores open at least a year, surpassing analysts' forecasts.

June wholesale inventories were unchanged as the large 1.5% jump in sales stripped warehouse supply. The combination left a 1.22 month inventory to sales ratio -- just above the 1.21 record low of March. Low inventory supply will provide a boost to production as inventory rebuilding will strengthen under a stronger growth economy to provide a welcome tailwind.

In a second report from the department, new applications for jobless benefits fell by a seasonally adjusted 3,000 to a six-month low of 390,000 for the work week ending Aug. 2. It marked the third week in a row that claims were below 400,000, a level associated with a weak job market. This suggest the pace of layoffs is stabilizing. Claims hit a high this year of 459,000 during the work week that ended April 19.

John Lonski, an economist with Moody's Investors Services, said the boost in productivity and drop in labor costs should set the stage for a resumption of payrolls growth in the next few months by making it more "profitable" for employers to add workers. He predicted that the government's employment report for August will show an increase of about 40,000 in nonfarm payrolls.

Unemployment typically lags the rest of the economy, since employers usually wait until a recovery is guaranteed before they hire new workers.  Everything I stated above combined, will create millions upon millions of jobs like the last recovery. There are hundreds of cities in the United States with unemployment under 4.0 % (considered by many to be full employment). You take the poorly managed California out of the national equation and the recovery looks 10 times better.   California has 10 of the top 25 cities with the highest unemployment.

26 posted on 08/11/2003 7:38:41 AM PDT by BushCountry (To the last, I will grapple with Democrats. For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at Liberals.)
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To: BushCountry
You keep posting the same lies about how everything is rosy. The economy was on the mend in May the econmy was on the mend in June, the econmy ws on the mend in July. Peopel are not going to buy the line teh economy is on the mend unless tehy are feeling it in their own wallets. india is predicting that 100% of US firms will be offshore outsourcing within the next two years. GWB needs to address this he needs to address the fact we have had gguest workers in teh USA while there is high unemployment. You are talking prdeictions from people who do not have a good track record. Durable goods orders are up but how nmany of those durable goods orders are for Americna manufcatured durable goods. What happens to those stats when the effect of imports is taken out of them are they still positive? No I have not done the math in detail but round math figures factoring out Jet Blue's order for airbus aircraft and thenumbers do not look rosy. Even defense orders areon 50% American content (otherwise why all teh complaining about a bill requiring 65% Ameican content in DOD purchases).

Stating everything is coming along just fine when the actual evidence of gains in teh economy is not going to get GWB re-elected (but maybe that is not what you want).

29 posted on 08/11/2003 7:49:58 AM PDT by harpseal (Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown)
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To: BushCountry
Yuo should lay low with all your BS hype. I' just had three friends in three weeks who've had their jobs shipped off shore.

Where the rubber hits the road, tens of thousands of Americans are losing their jobs every week, because GWB insists on continuing the globalist Clinton policies. In this regard, he's just as guilty as that POS.

....meet the new boss, same as the old boss....

As for my three friends, they are not going to make the mistake of voting for a guy who gives corporations a tax break for shipping jobs offshore.
68 posted on 08/11/2003 12:21:44 PM PDT by taxed2death (A few billion here, a few trillion there...we're all friends right?)
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