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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Leaving 1980 On An Upbeat
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
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- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 5, 1981
- ECONOMY & BUSINESS
- Leaving 1980 on an Upbeat Note
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Some interest rate relief, and Christmas sales end with a surge
- </p>
- <p> American businessmen will close the books on 1980 this week
- with some relief. Record interest rates, a deep but very short
- recession and roaring inflation made 1980 a year best forgotten.
- Yet the uncertainty that was its hallmark is likely to linger
- into the new year.
- </p>
- <p> In a fitting end to a year when economists were generally
- confused about what was happening to U.S. business, the Commerce
- Department last week reported a substantial revision of its
- statistics. The agency updated, and in some cases radically
- changed, basic economic figures going back a decade. It was
- almost as if the experts did not like the old numbers and
- decided to make up some new ones.
- </p>
- <p> The latest statistics only added more confusion to an already
- cloudy picture, and set some economists to thinking about new
- explanations for American business woes. The agency reported
- that the gross national product grew at an annual rate of 2.4%
- between July and September, nearly three times faster than
- previously reported. The Commerce Department also estimated
- that the economy in the fourth quarter would increase at an
- annual rate of just under 4%.
- </p>
- <p> The revisions drastically altered the picture of Americans as
- buy-now, save-later free spenders. The new figures showed that
- consumers have saved perhaps 20% more of their incomes over the
- past decade than previously estimated. Between July and
- September, wage earners put away a prudent 6.1% of their
- disposable income, rather than the anemic 4.7% reported earlier.
- Observed Courtenay Slater, chief economist of the Commerce
- Department: "The notion that people are dipping into savings
- to sustain consumption is probably slightly exaggerated." The
- new figures also gave a somewhat brighter picture of the
- nation's lagging productivity. Real output per hour worked grew
- at an average annual rate of 3.2% between 1969 and 1979,
- instead of the 2.9% previously estimated.
- </p>
- <p> Carter Administration officials were quick to read the new
- numbers as evidence that the economy is not as bad off as it has
- been described to be by Ronald Reagan. Said Charles Schultze,
- the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers: "Apart from
- the higher interest rates, the Reagan Administration is actually
- inheriting an economy that is strong. The U.S.'s current
- account balance is at near record levels, oil imports are
- falling, and investment has never been higher."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration's upbeat tone was reflected in key areas
- of the economy last week. Wells Fargo and Chase Manhattan reduced
- the prime rate they charge their best corporate customers from
- 21% and 21.5%, respectively, to 20.5%. Although only a few
- banks lowered their rates, it was the first fall in the prime
- since late July, when the key interest rate started careering
- upward from 11%. Just that modest drop, though, was enough to
- send Wall Street into a rally, as the Dow Jones industrial
- average soared 21.59 points in one day. The stock market has
- been beset by fears that the record high interest rates would
- lead to a new and sharp recession. But the Wall Street rebound
- was short-lived, and the Dow Jones rose only another eight
- points to close the week at 966.38.
- </p>
- <p> Retailers last week also received some unexpected Christmas
- cheer. Early holiday shopping had been very sluggish, as wary
- consumers looked for bargains. But in the last days of
- Christmas shopping, consumers suddenly got the spirit of the
- season. Stores that cater to the carriage trade did especially
- well. Sales at the tony Neiman Marcus stores in Texas were up
- 23% as compared with last year. During the last week before
- Christmas, Neiman Marcus sales on some days were as much as a
- million dollars more than projected. Middle America's
- retailers, however, did not do as well. Stores for price-
- conscious shoppers, such as K mart, J.C. Penney and Sears, are
- expected to show sales gains of only 2% to 3% during December
- after discounting inflation.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the end-of-the-year cheer, experts warned that the
- fundamental state of the economy remains poor. Inflation, the
- underlying cause of the U.S.'s economic troubles, continues
- unabated. Figures released last week showed that consumer prices
- in November rose by an extra 1%, or at a compounded annual rate
- of 12.7%. Food and beverage prices rose 1.1%, with the cost of
- sugar and artificial sweeteners going up 7.9%. Gasoline and
- housing costs rose moderately, but they are expected to start
- moving up sharply in the next few months. Mobil, Exxon and
- Standard Oil of Indiana announced last week that they are
- raising wholesale prices for gasoline and home heating oil by
- as much as 2 cents per gal. following the latest rise in OPEC
- prices. Banks are expected to keep mortgage rates high, even
- though the prime rate has dropped slightly.
- </p>
- <p> The economy is likely to remain sluggish as long as interest
- rates are in double digits, and money experts do not anticipate
- that the Federal Reserve will permit the rates to drop rapidly.
- Few economists expect a repeat of the 1980 experience, when
- interest rates rose to 20% in the spring but then fell to 11%
- in the summer. Said Irwin Kellner, chief economist of
- Manufacturers Hanover Trust: "The decline in the prime is a
- hope, rather than an actuality." Lawrence Kudlow, chief
- economist of the Bear, Stearns investment banking firm, still
- believes that the prime interest rate will rise to 25% by
- February. Said he: "The economy is stronger than people think,
- but a lot of the expansion is inflationary, not real. Fears of
- new inflation and credit demands from both the Government and
- the private sector will drive up interest rates."
- </p>
- <p> The leading victim of the high cost of credit in 1980, the
- American auto industry, received grim news last week: the U.S.
- in 1980 fell into second place in car production. The new
- leader is JApan, which built 11 million autos and trucks, 40%
- more than the U.S.'s 7.8 million.
- </p>
- <p> The industry's sick man, Chrysler, last week continued to
- fight for its life, as it formally submitted a request for an
- additional $400 million in federally guaranteed loans. The
- United Auto Workers union reluctantly agreed to negotiate up to
- $600 million in wage concessions with the stricken company, but
- the union is expected to ask for some nonwage concessions.
- Chrysler decided to extend the Christmas holiday closings of
- five assembly plants for an extra week and to reduce production
- of its new K-cars, thus laying off another 2,880 workers
- indefinitely.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the incoming Reagan Administration, which will
- inherit these economic problems in less than a month, is
- beginning to tone down its economic rhetoric. The suggestion
- by David Stockman, the newly appointed budget director, and New
- York Congressman Jack Kemp, that Reagan should declare a
- national economic emergency to prevent a "G.O.P. economic
- Dunkirk" may be quietly dying. Arthur Burns, former Federal
- Reserve chairman and a sometime Reagan adviser, said it would
- be "unwise" for the new President to initiate any sweeping new
- measures. Stockman is now staying out of the public eye amid
- reports that other Reagan officials found his advice
- intemperate; Kemp last week said that the memo's use of the word
- "emergency" has been misinterpreted. "Something has to be done
- about the growth of budget expenditures, but this is not to be
- confused with Franklin D. Roosevelt's bank holidays," Kemp
- cautioned.
- </p>
- <p> While 1980 ends in uncertainty and confusion, the new year
- will start with an unpleasant certitude: higher taxes. Social
- Security taxes will rise sharply in 1981. The rate paid by both
- employers and employees will increase as of the first paycheck
- in the new year from 6.13% to 6.65%. At the same time, the
- income cut-off for Social Security taxes will increase from
- $25,900 to $29,700 in 1981. This means that the maximum Social
- Security tax for individuals will jump from $1,587.67 to
- $1,975.05. THis will increase the total tax load on Americans
- next year by $40 billion. To businessmen and consumers already
- suffering from staggering interest rates and stunning price
- tags, the tax increase will be an auspicious beginning for the
- new year.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Alexander Taylor. Reported by William Blaylock/Washington
- and other U.S. bureaus</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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