The central bank has raised its economic growth forecasts for the year by 0.5%, so it will range from 3.5% to 3.75%, Greenspan says. And the growth rate is projected to be 3.5% to 4% next year. "The U.S. economy has confronted very significant challenges over the past year or so," Greenspan said Tuesday. "Those problems, however, led to only a brief and mild downturn in economic activity, reflecting the underlying strength and increased resiliency that the economy has achieved in recent years."
Of course, automated productivity has decreased the need to add jobs, but Greenspan hopes the unemployment rate will be 5.25% to 5.5% by the end of next year. The unemployment rate for June was 5.9% (see Employment Stats Don't Inspire Confidence). While technology is helping the economy, it also helped cause some problems. Greenspan says the recent economic downturn was caused by a slower demand for capital goods as companies realized they'd overstocked inventories during the economic boom. The backlash hit tech and communications sectors particularly hard. And the sales lost by these companies had a trickle-down effect on other industries. In addition, Greenspan said, "the collapse of many Internet firms and the difficulties of the high-tech sector more generally led to a significant drop in the demand for office space that was exacerbated as the economic slowdown widened beyond the tech sector." He added that "overall, the level of real business-fixed investment plunged about 11% between its quarterly peak in the final months of 2000 and the first quarter of this year." But, Greenspan said, there's been a recent growth in production. In fact, the Federal Reserve Board reported Tuesday that U.S. computer makers last month were busier than a year earlier. Though industrial production for computers and related products edged up only 0.8% from May to June, it's 11.1% higher than a year earlier. That compares favorably with industrial production for all industries, which increased a minute 0.2% during the past year. The capacity-utilization rate for computer makers remained at 68.2% in June, the same as May, but 2.1 percentage points higher than it was a year earlier. Still, the output from factories that build computers is well below the average level of the past 33 years, 80.7%, but slightly higher than the average rate of 66.9% that followed the last recession a decade ago. Yet the capacity-utilization level for computer makers trails the rate for all industries, which stood at 76.1% last month.
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