Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Survey: Most economists see recovery beginning

By Mae Anderson
The Associated Press

New York » More than 80 percent of economists believe the recession is over and an expansion has begun, but they expect the recovery will be slow as worries over unemployment and high federal debt persist.

That consensus comes from leading forecasters in a survey by the National Association for Business Economics released Monday.

"The survey found that the vast majority of business economists believe that the recession has ended but that the economic recovery is likely to be more moderate than those typically experienced following steep declines," said NABE President-elect Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Point Loma Nazarene University.

The forecasters upgraded the economic outlook for the next several quarters, but cautioned that unemployment rates and the federal deficit are expected to remain high through the next year. Forecasters now expect the economy, as measured by gross domestic product, to advance at a 2.9 percent pace in the second half of the year, after falling for four straight quarters for the first time on records dating to 1947. They expect a 3 percent gain in 2010.

Still, the federal deficit has ballooned and the jobless rate is expected to lag behind, as employers remain cautious.

The unemployment rate rose to 9.8 percent in September from 9.7 percent, the Labor Department said earlier this month, the highest point in 26 years.

Forecasters expect the unemployment rate to continue to rise, to 10 percent in the first quarter of next year, before edging down to 9.5 percent by the end of 2010.

The recession, the worst since the 1930s, has eliminated a net total of 7.2 million jobs. More job cuts were announced last week. Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., which makes industrial and scientific equipment, said it will close a plant in Dubuque, Iowa, next year, costing 350 jobs.

Worries about unemployment are likely to continue to constrain household spending. Personal consumption spending likely began rising in the second half of this year, but is expected to remain low in 2010. Still, Americans aren't expected to save as much as they have in past decades. The savings rate is expected to be above the 2 percent average of the past four years, but below the 9 percent average in the 1970s and 1980s.

The housing recovery is one bright spot. Forecasters expect 2010 to be the first year since 2005 that the housing sector will contribute to overall growth. Home prices are expected to rise 2 percent in 2010, but panelists do not believe that will stifle the housing recovery.

Inflation is expected to remain low due to the weak labor market and other factors. Thus, the NABE panel -- which consists of 44 economists surveyed Sept. 2 through Sept. 24 -- expects the federal funds rate to remain at its current record low near zero until late next spring, before a gradual rise begins.

"The good news is that this deep and long recession appears to be over, and with improving credit markets, the U.S. economy can return to solid growth next year without worry about rising inflation," said Reaser.

Home-buying incentives available, but time is short

Economy » The two programs are intended to help spur the sale of houses.

By Lesley Mitchell
The Salt Lake Tribune

Homebuyers along the Wasatch Front are racing to meet a deadline for purchasing incentives that expire on Nov. 30.

The larger of the two incentives is an $8,000 federal income tax credit geared toward first-time buyers of new or existing homes, although anyone who hasn't owned a home in the past three years is eligible. Utah also is offering a $4,000 grant for buyers of newly built homes. Both state and federal officials stress that there is no leeway on the deadlines for the incentives, which are aimed at boosting the sagging economy and real estate sector.

"You could be a day late and $8,000 short," said IRS spokesman Bill Brunson.

Salt Lake City Realtor DeAnna Dipo is telling prospective buyers who are interested in either incentive they probably are going to need to be under contract to buy a home no later than the end of October to allow for sufficient time for loan underwriting and to beat the Nov. 30 deadline to close.

"It's definitely getting people off the fence," said Ryan Kirkham, president of the Salt Lake Board of Realtors. "There's no question that it's having a positive effect on home sales right now." Further motivating buyers are super-low mortgage rates of about 5 percent or even below 5 percent.

"A lot of people realize that rates aren't always going to be this low," Kirkham said.

First-time buyer Saxony Sharkey qualified this summer for a mortgage at 5.25 percent to purchase an existing home in West Jordan. Like other buyers, she first heard about the federal home-buying incentive last year. But last year, the incentive was a $7,500 no-interest loan that had to be repaid.

Only this year, when the government started offering an $8,000 tax credit -- it does not have to be repaid if the home remains a primary residence for at least 36 months -- did she make her move.

"I thought, this is something I didn't want to pass it up," she said.

The state incentive, dubbed "Home Run 2," provides $4,000 grants to buyers who meet certain criteria and buy new construction. It follows the original Home Run program, which provided $6,000 grants to new home buyers. That program ended in June after all the funds were exhausted and 1,652 grants had been issued.

Today, there's about 1,400 grants available out of 1,950 when the program debuted on Sept. 4.

"The interest level has been very high," said Grant Whitaker, president and CEO of the Utah Housing Corp., which is administering the program.

Clark Ivory, who lobbied the state to create the grant program, said his home-building company had 60 sales in September, up from 47 in September 2008.

Cristy and Luis Duran, who are renting, didn't think they could afford to buy. But after a local real estate agent told them about the incentives, they went to a mortgage lender to see if they could qualify to buy a townhome.

They did qualify, and are using the $4,000 state incentive toward their down payment. Once they close in a few weeks, they will file an amended return to get the $8,000 federal incentive, which they plan to use to finish their basement.

"Without this money, we would not have been able to buy this home," Cristy Duran said.

Sharkey said she elected to amend her 2008 tax return after she bought her home this summer, and expects to get the tax credit money sometime over the holidays. Others are waiting to file for the credit in early 2010 when they file their 2009 return. Half of Sharkey's $8,000 was earmarked for some upgrades; the other half is destined for her saving account.

"I wanted to use some of its on upgrades," she said. "But based on the way things are going right now [with the economy], I thought it would be good [to put] half of it in savings."

lesley@sltrib.com