- Dollar Trouble, Oil's Bubble Could Derail Recovery
- Jobless, Wal-Mart to Drive Sentiment on Thursday
- Hewlett-Packard to Acquire 3Com for $2.7 Billion in Cash
- AIG CEO: I Remain 'Totally Committed' to Firm
- CNN Anchor Lou Dobbs Says He is Leaving Network
- A Day on the USS Harry S. Truman
- How the Droid and Google Threaten the GPS Makers
- Commercial Real Estate Near Disaster: Fund Manager
- This Town Will Pay YOU $10,000 to Buy a House
- What to Expect From Disney Earnings?
- HP's Shot Across Cisco's Bow
- USC Football Blog Leads All-Access Space
- Clowning Around At Work
- Ahead of Earnings Disney Restructures Studio
- Nov. 11: Unusual Volume Leaders
- 3 'Clear Sailing' Mid-Caps For Investors: Strategist
- Intimate Apparel Sales Heating Up: Maidenform CEO
- A Day On The USS Harry S. Truman
- CNN finds prime-time success elusive
- Winnie the Pooh royalties dispute appealed
- Winnie the Pooh royalties case is back in LA court
- Ecuador proposes deficit spending to boost economy
- Standard & Poor's to change SmallCap 600 listings
- Earnings Preview-J.C. Penney Co.
- S&P raises ratings on Dollar Thrifty Automotive
- Outdoor Channel to cut 25 pct of Winnercomm jobs
- Aegean Marine Petroleum 3Q profit up 49 percent
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Top forecasters are growing more confident the U.S. economy has embarked on a sustainable recovery, a survey released on Tuesday showed.
The Blue Chip Economic Indicators newsletter for November found forecasters had raised their 2010 projections for gross domestic product for a fourth straight month. However, they still expect the pace of growth to fall short of the typical post-recession bounce.
The U.S. economy should expand 2.7 percent next year, the newsletter said. That marked an upward revision from the 2.5 percent pace the survey panel had expected a month ago.
For 2009, the consensus of the 52 economists polled was for a contraction of 2.4 percent, 0.1 percentage point less than the prior estimate.
"The major uncertainty surrounding the outlook for growth next year involves the degree to which private demand accelerates as the positive contributions to GDP from reduced business inventory liquidation and fiscal stimulus play out," the newsletter said.
The government said last month that the economy grew at a 3.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter after contracting in five out of the prior six quarters.
However, a report on Friday showed the jobless rate jumped to a 26-1/2 year high of 10.2 percent in October, suggesting employers are doubtful about a sustained expansion soon.
The jobs market is expected to improve slowly. Fifty-two percent of the economists surveyed said the unemployment rate will not fall below 7 percent on a sustained basis until the first half of 2013 or later.
While the economy grew in the third quarter for the first time in more than a year, 75 percent of the economists polled said the initial estimate will be revised downward.
"We'll see a steeper decline in investment and business structures and a little less growth in residential investment," said Randell Moore, editor of the newsletter.
Forecasts for the fourth quarter, however, were raised. The consensus now sees growth at a 2.8 percent annualized rate in the final three months of the year, up from 2.4 percent.
The survey was completed prior to the release of the October unemployment report on Friday.
(Reporting by Nancy Waitz; Editing by Kenneth Barry)
- Bernard and Ruth Madoff's personal possessions will be auctioned this weekend. Click ahead to see.
- US real estate prices have fallen dramatically, but some places are still doing well. See the best-performing zip codes this year.
- An Italian cashmere maker aims to make profits while creating ideal conditions for his workers.
- Just in time for the holidays, the Triumph company of Japan offers the latest innovation in women’s undergarments.
- The real result of health care reform will be bloated government and higher deficits, says Larry Kudlow.
- Vote and suggest your own, and remember--there's a fine line between a hero and a zero.









