November 18, 2024

Claims for Unemployment Aid Rise, but Raise Little Concern

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of Americans seeking unemployment aid rose sharply last week but remained at a level consistent with moderate hiring.

Weekly applications for unemployment benefits leapt 38,000 to a seasonally adjusted 368,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. Applications plummeted in the previous two weeks to five-year lows; applications fell by a combined 45,000 in the second and third weeks of January.

The volatility reflects the government’s difficulty adjusting the data to account for layoffs after the holiday shopping season. Job cuts typically spike in the second week in January as retailers dismiss temporary employees hired for the winter holidays. Layoffs then fall in the second half of the month.

The department tries to adjust for such fluctuations but the January figures can still be volatile. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, ticked up to 352,000, just above a four-year low.

Most economists weren’t concerned by the increase.

“This just reverses some of the previous sharp falls without altering the gradual downward trend,” said Paul Dales, an economist at Capital Economics.

On Friday, the government is scheduled to issue its January jobs report. Analysts forecast that it will show employers added 155,000 jobs, the same as in December. The unemployment rate is expected to remain at 7.8 percent for the third straight month.

That’s consistent with the number of people seeking unemployment aid. Applications fluctuated between 360,000 and 390,000 for most of last year. At the same time, employers added an average of 153,000 jobs a month.

That’s just been enough to slowly push down the unemployment rate, which fell 0.7 percentage points last year to 7.8 percent.

The number of people continuing to claim benefits also rose. More than 5.9 million people received benefits in the week ended Jan. 12, the latest data available. That’s 250,000 more than the previous week.

Steady hiring is needed to resume economic growth. The government said Wednesday that the economy shrank at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the October-December quarter, hurt by a sharp cut in military spending, fewer exports and sluggish growth in company stockpiles.

The contraction points to what is likely to be the biggest headwind for the economy this year: sharp government spending cuts and continuing budget fights.

Two important drivers of growth improved last quarter. Consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, increased at a faster pace and businesses invested more in equipment and software.

Homebuilders are stepping up construction to meet rising demand. That could create more construction jobs.

Home prices are rising steadily. That tends to make Americans feel wealthier and more likely to spend. Housing could add as much as 1 percentage point to economic growth this year, some economists estimate.

And auto sales reached their highest level in five years in 2012. That’s increasing production and hiring atAmerican automakers and their suppliers.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/01/business/growth-in-consumer-spending-slows.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix Blog: The Benefits of Uncertainty

When people argue that uncertainty about taxation and regulation is freezing corporate decision-making, they are generally arguing that more certainty would be a good thing for the economy. The idea, deemed so self-evident that it sometimes is left unspoken, is that corporations are hesitating to invest in the United States.

But an interesting study flips this story on its head. It finds that manufacturing employment in the United States declined sharply as a direct result of a 2000 government decision to fix in place the level of tariffs on imports from China.

The level of tariffs had remained constant for years, but only because Congress acted each year to extend the status quo. Without that annual vote, tariffs on many goods would have increased, in some cases quite sharply. Then in 2000, Congress granted “permanent normal trade relations” to China. The legislation mostly left the existing tariffs unchanged. What it eliminated was uncertainty about next year.

The result was a burst of corporate decision-making. Newly confident that tariffs on imports would not increase, executives responded by firing workers in the United States and moving production to the other side of the Pacific.

The effect was huge, according to the paper, by Justin R. Pierce, a Federal Reserve economist, and Peter K. Schott, a professor at the Yale School of Management.

“Absent the shift in U.S. policy, U.S. manufacturing employment would have risen nearly 10 percent between 2001 and 2007, versus an actual decline of more than 15 percent,” they wrote – a difference of roughly four million manufacturing jobs.

The analysis is based on the fact that before 2000, in the absence of Congressional action, tariffs on different goods would have increased by different amounts. The larger the potential increase, the greater the weight of uncertainty before 2000 – and, the authors found, the larger the decline in employment after 2000.

There’s an abundance of ancillary evidence, too: imports from China increased in those sectors, as did the number of American companies importing from China and the number of Chinese companies exporting to the United States. And surviving domestic manufacturers invested heavily in technology to remain competitive.

Job losses cause a great deal of pain. But mainstream economists have long maintained that moving manufacturing to China is good for the United States in the long run, because it reduces prices and shifts resources to more productive uses. Even that consolation, however, has lately been called into question by research showing that dreaming up new things is easier if you also are making things. Put differently, the other jobs eventually will follow the manufacturing jobs.

There is some evidence that the worst is over now. Last year was the third straight year of job growth in manufacturing. But the increases are tiny in comparison to the jobs lost since 2000. Manufacturing employment fell from 17.2 million at the end of 2000 to a nadir of 11.5 million in 2009, and has since climbed to 12 million at the end of 2012.

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/07/the-benefits-of-uncertainty/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Claims for Jobless Benefits Fall

Far fewer people are seeking new unemployment benefits than just three months ago, the Labor Department said Thursday.

The number of people applying for benefits fell last week to 366,000, the fewest since May 2008. If the number stayed that low consistently, it could signal that hiring is strong enough to lower unemployment, analysts say.

The unemployment rate in November was 8.6 percent. The last time jobless applications were this low, the rate was 5.4 percent.

The four-week average of weekly unemployment applications, which smooths fluctuations, dropped last week to 387,750. That’s the lowest four-week average since July 2008. The four-week average has declined in 10 of the last 12 weeks.

“Labor market conditions have taken a turn for the better in recent weeks,” Michael Gapen, an economist at Barclays Capital, said in a note to clients. “Payroll growth should improve in the coming months.”

Applications for unemployment benefits are a measure of the pace of layoffs. Job cuts have fallen sharply since the recession. Employers have been hiring at only a modest pace. But when applications fall below 375,000 consistently, that usually signals that hiring is strong enough to lower the unemployment rate.

The downward trend comes as Congress is wrangling over whether to extend emergency unemployment benefits, which are set to expire at the end of this year.

Other recent reports suggest the job market is improving a bit. In the past three months, net job gains have averaged 143,000 a month. That compares with an average of 84,000 in the previous three months.

In November, employers added 120,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate fell to 8.6 percent from 9 percent. That was the lowest unemployment rate in 2 and a half years. But about half that decline occurred because many of the unemployed gave up looking for work. When people stop looking for a job, they’re no longer counted as unemployed.

About 6.7 million people are receiving unemployment benefits. About 2 million will lose their benefits by mid-February if the emergency program expires.

Lawmakers differ over how long benefits should last. The House passed a Republican bill Tuesday that would renew emergency aid but reduce the maximum duration to 59 weeks from the current 99 weeks.

Democrats want to keep the full 99 weeks. The measure is part of broader legislation in the Democratic-led Senate that would also extend a Social Security tax cut.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=10a98f56e27a56476bc558bbdeff97af

Room for Debate: What Should the Fed Do Next?

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For Jobs and Housing, Some Hopeful Signs

Separately, a Commerce Department report said that builders started slightly fewer homes in October but submitted plans for a wave of apartments, a mixed sign for the struggling housing market.

Weekly applications for jobless benefits dropped by 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 388,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. It was the fourth decline in five weeks.

The four-week average, a less volatile measure, dropped to 396,750. That is the first time the average been below 400,000 in seven months.

Applications need to consistently drop below 375,000 to signal sustained job gains. They have not fallen that low since February.

The job market “is still weak but there are hopeful signs of some modest improvement,” Steven A. Wood, an economist at Insight Economics, said in a note to clients.

The number of people receiving benefits also fell to the lowest level since September 2008, when Lehman Brothers collapsed and the financial crisis intensified.

The benefit rolls fell 57,000 to 3.6 million in the week ended Nov. 5. That is one week behind the applications data. The figure is the lowest since Sept. 20, 2008.

That does not include about three million additional people receiving extended benefits from emergency programs put in place during the recession. All told, 6.8 million people received benefits during the week ended Oct. 29, the latest data available.

A rebound in manufacturing could lead to more hiring. Factory output grew in October for the fourth straight month, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday. Production of trucks, electronics and business equipment all rose.

Another report on Thursday from the Commerce Department showed that home builders broke ground on a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 628,000 homes last month. That is roughly half the 1.2 million that economists equate with a healthy housing market.

But building permits, a gauge of future construction, rose nearly 11 percent. The increase was spurred by a 30 percent increase in apartment permits, which reached its highest level in three years.

Over the last year, apartment permits have surged roughly 63 percent. Permits for single-family homes have increased just 6.6 percent in that span.

Renting has become a preferred option for many Americans who lost their jobs during the recession and were forced to leave their homes. The surge in apartment construction may help increase economic growth, but it has not been enough to offset the steep declines in single-family homebuilding.

Construction starts of single-family homes, which make up about 70 percent of residential home construction, rose nearly 4 percent last month. Starts for apartments, a more volatile category, fell more than 13 percent.

Over all, homebuilding dipped in 2009 to just 554,000 homes, the lowest levels in 50 years. Last year the figure rose to roughly 587,000 homes and this year may not be much better.

Though new homes represent just 20 percent of the overall home market, they have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built creates an average of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Association of Home Builders.

After previous recessions, housing accounted for at least 15 percent of economic growth in the United States. Since the recession officially ended in June 2009, it has contributed just 4 percent.

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Economic Memo: The Gridlock Where Debts Meet Politics

This cycle of bureaucracy and gridlock has been repeating itself for months now. It is tempting to blame feckless politicians on both sides of the Atlantic, and that would not be entirely wrong.

But the frailty of politicians is not the full story. The fact is that most of the industrialized world — Europe, the United States, Japan, too — is in a difficult economic bind. There are no simple solutions that would quickly win the approval of citizens if only politicians were willing to try them.

Most voters in these places have yet to come to grips with the notion that they have promised themselves benefits that, at current tax rates, they cannot afford. Their economies have been growing too slowly, for too long, to pay for the coming bulge of retirees.

“The U.S. and Europe have to make hard choices because of two things: slower growth and aging populations,” said Barry Eichengreen, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley. “Europe’s choices are even harder than America’s, because the prospects for growth are more dubious.”

By the end of last week, as the Greek Parliament took a big step toward approving a European deal to reduce the country’s debt, some reasons for hope had emerged. Yet the main dynamic had not changed.

Europe still has not set aside enough money to cover its debts, with Italy now presenting the most immediate problems, many economists say. In the United States, a special Congressional deficit committee appears to be making little progress, and some members of Congress have even begun talking about undoing the automatic Pentagon cuts set to take place if the committee deadlocks.

On the most basic level, affluent countries are facing sharply increasing claims on their resources even as those resources are growing less quickly than they once were.

The increasing claims come from the aging of the population, while the slowing growth of available resources comes from a slowdown of economic expansion over the last generation. A complex mix of factors, varying by country, has slowed growth, and the slowdown has been exacerbated everywhere by the worst financial crisis and global recession in 70 years.

The combination has left Europe and the United States with frustrated populations that still have more sacrifices ahead. “These are very difficult moral issues,” said Benjamin Friedman, an economic historian at Harvard. “We are really talking about the level at which we support the elderly retired population.”

As Simon Tilford, chief economist of the Center for European Reform, a research group in London, said, “Countries will face tougher choices.”

In the United States, the debates center on whether to let government grow as the population ages and whether the affluent, who have done very well in recent decades, should pay more taxes. In Europe, the issues revolve around whether to shrink government, which is bigger than it is here, and whether well-off northern countries like Germany should support poorer countries, like Greece and Italy, which also suffer from fiscal irresponsibility.

Everywhere, though, the debate is about much more than just partisan advantage or the next election. It is a philosophical debate.

“The country’s in such bad shape, and people wish Congress would do something about it,” Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, said in an interview last week. “And we have a big difference of opinion about what ought to be done.”

He added, “That is what we do here — we have big debates about the future of the country.”

Of course, politicians have also exposed themselves to legitimate criticism. Mr. McConnell and his fellow Republicans have blocked a short-term jobs bill proposed by President Obama that has broad support from independent economists, and for the most part they have failed to level with voters about cuts to Medicare, Social Security and the military that a no-new-taxes pledge would require. Democrats, including Mr. Obama, have vowed not to raise taxes on households making less than $250,000, which seems impossible without larger benefit cuts than Democrats have acknowledged.

Polls, however, suggest that there is little political advantage in explaining the reality of future budget math. “Everybody thinks, ‘My taxes are going to fund somebody else’s social programs,’ ” Mr. Eichengreen said, “making people even more resistant to solutions.”

Playing to those sentiments, the presidential contenders in the United States and France seem unlikely to force austerity upon angry voters.

The United States and Europe still have more than enough resources to solve their problems. They are among the richest societies the world has ever known, benefiting from skilled work forces, the rule of law and political freedoms that often help produce economic innovations. The United States also continues to benefit from low interest rates, a signal of the bond market’s confidence.

Yet the United States and Europe face the risk that their problems will feed on each other. Recent economic stagnation may make voters and policy makers unwilling to make hard choices, and the political paralysis might then worsen the economy by creating new financial turmoil. In an article in the current issue of the journal The National Interest, Mr. Friedman named this problem the “no-growth trap.”

In the short term, this trap takes the form of resistance to emergency measures, like Germany’s distaste at bailing out more profligate countries, which may increase deficits. “The central paradox of financial crises,” Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, said before leaving for the Group of 20 meetings in Europe last week, “is that what feels just and fair is the opposite of what’s required for a just and fair outcome.”

Longer term, the trap is created by resistance to the higher taxes and reduced benefits necessary to return countries to financial stability. The resistance is understandable, given how weak income growth has been in the past decade, but it is not sustainable.

With Europe facing a series of debt decisions in the coming weeks and the Congressional deficit committee closing in on its Nov. 23 deadline, it is tempting to predict that policy makers will have to start making some big decisions soon. Then again, if history is a guide, they may well find ways to put off those decisions yet again.

Suzanne Daley contributed reporting from New York.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/06/world/europe/the-gridlock-where-debts-meet-politics-economic-memo.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Businesses Increase Investment Spending

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that orders for capital goods outside of the military sector and excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending, increased 1.1 percent after falling 0.2 percent in July.

That was well above economists’ expectations for a 0.3 percent rise and suggested that businesses, sitting on about $2 trillion in cash, had not responded to the recent financial market volatility by curtailing investment.

“If we were in a recession we would expect to see business orders for capital goods plummeting and they are not,” said Richard DeKaser, an economist at the Parthenon Group in Boston.

The solid rise in investment spending, which was accompanied by a 2.8 percent rise in shipments of capital goods, prompted some economists to raise forecasts for third-quarter economic growth.

J.P. Morgan lifted its growth forecast for the economy to an annual rate of 1.5 percent from 1.0 percent, while the forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers raised their projection to 2.1 percent from 1.7 percent.

“While we don’t yet know the split between how much went to domestic versus foreign buyers, this almost certainly implies another solid quarter for capital equipment spending,” said Michael Feroli, an economist at J.P. Morgan in New York.

Extreme volatility in financial markets, as politicians in Washington fought over budget policy and Europe struggled to come to grips with its debt crisis, has knocked confidence and raised the risk of a new recession.

But businesses are showing some confidence in the recovery.

Although business spending plans point to continued growth, the report also confirmed a slowing trend in manufacturing.

Overall orders for durable goods — items meant to last three years or more, like toasters and aircraft — dipped 0.1 percent after a 4.1 percent jump in July.

The orders, which are volatile from month to month, dropped despite a 23.5 percent rise in orders for civilian aircraft.

Boeing received 127 orders for aircraft, according to the plane maker’s Web site, up from 115 in July, with Delta Airlines placing an order for 100 planes.

Excluding transportation, orders also slipped 0.1 percent after rising 0.7 percent in July.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=82b212a35255f066c29424e6e45482c4

Consumers in Many Areas Spent More, Fed Reports

The Fed said five of its regions, Dallas, Kansas City, Minneapolis, San Francisco and St. Louis. reported modest or slight growth in late July and August. The seven other regions described growth as subdued, slow or sluggish.

The survey, known as the beige book, offers mostly anecdotal information on economic conditions. Its findings were a slight improvement from the previous survey, which said growth slowed in eight of the 12 regions in June and early July.

Consumer spending increased in most regions from the previous survey. But the gains were mostly a result of stronger auto sales. Demand for other products was flat or fell in several regions during late July and August.

The report offered little guidance about future hiring. It noted that several districts had said the volatile stock market and economic uncertainty had led many businesses to lower expectations for the near future. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 1,962 points, or roughly 15 percent, from July 22 through Aug. 10.

Although far from upbeat, the overall tone from the anecdotal evidence “wasn’t all doom and gloom,” said Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.

The regional outlook will help shape the discussion at the central bank’s next meeting on Sept. 20-21.

The economy barely grew in the first half of the year, and the government said last week that employers stopped adding jobs in August.

Consumers and businesses are feeling less confident after a turbulent summer. Lawmakers fought over raising the federal borrowing limit, Standard Poor’s downgraded long-term United States debt, and stocks have fluctuated wildly after plunging in late-July and early August.

Manufacturing slowed in many parts of the country, including New York, Philadelphia and Richmond, the survey noted. Textile makers in Richmond said that their markets had grown weaker because of declines in consumer confidence.

Home sales slowed in many districts, although Atlanta, Boston, Dallas and Minneapolis said sales had improved slightly compared to last summer’s weak levels.

Some economists say the Fed must act to help the economy avoid another recession.

On Aug. 9, the Federal Reserve said it planned to keep interest rates very low until at least mid-2013, assuming the economy remained weak. Minutes from that meeting showed some Fed officials had pushed for more aggressive steps.

One possibility is the Fed could increase the percentage of long-term Treasury securities it keeps in its mix of holdings. That approach would have the advantage of exerting downward pressure on long-term interest rates without adding to the Fed’s already record-level of securities.

Still, three regional bank presidents dissented from the Aug. 9 decision. They expressed concerns that the Fed’s policies were contributing to higher inflation.

The worsening jobs outlook has also put pressure on President Obama. He is expected on Thursday to introduce a $300 billion jobs package before a joint session of Congress. The plan is likely to include extensions of the payroll tax cut and long-term unemployment benefits, tax incentives for businesses that hire and money for public works projects.

The effort faces strong opposition from Republicans in Congress, who say Mr. Obama’s previous stimulus program failed.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=aed94808b721f4c618ea126dbc77fd56

Court Rejects Challenges to German Euro Bailouts

The decision was viewed by some analysts as a rare triumph for Chancellor Angela Merkel and seemed to place fewer restrictions than some had expected on her ability to react to the European debt crisis. At the same time, the high public standing of the court should lend broader legitimacy to government efforts to shore up the European currency.

But, other analysts said, the ruling could hamper Mrs. Merkel’s power to take quick measures.

The court’s president, Andreas Vosskuhle, said the ruling did not represent a “blank check for additional rescue packages.”

Speaking at a parliamentary budget debate in Berlin, Mrs. Merkel said the ruling had “absolutely confirmed” her government’s “transparent” handling of Europe’s debt crisis in close consultation with Parliament. “That is exactly the path we have followed,” she said.

Mrs. Merkel again underlined her country’s commitment to the single currency and European integration, saying the euro was “much more than a common currency.”

“If the euro collapses, so does Europe,” she said, adding that “Germany’s future is inseparable from Europe’s future.”

Closely watched by nervous markets, the court ruled that the government must seek the approval of Parliament’s budget committee before making money available for future bailouts of European countries struggling under mounting debt burdens.

“This was an important victory for Merkel’s government,” Christel Aranda-Hassel, an economist at Credit Suisse, said in a note. “At the same time,” she added, “the court strengthened the hand of parliament.” The need to seek approval of the Bundestag’s budget committee for future aid “will only make the process to rescue the euro more cumbersome at a time when speed is of the essence.”

Indeed, said Jan Dubsky, a euro area economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland in London, “it’s not going to be such a lengthy process as feared, but there is still an approval process necessary.”

The euro rose slightly on currency markets as word of the ruling emerged, but German Bund futures extended their losses, Reuters reported, quoting one unidentified trader as saying that while the broad outlines of the decision had been widely expected, markets were still waiting to parse the details. The DAX Index in Germany posted gains, along with other European stock markets.

Jessica Koch, an analyst at the Center for European Policy in Freiburg, Germany, said the decision could have implications for future attempts by euro zone governments to cooperate more closely in fiscal policy, for example by jointly issuing debt in the form of “euro bonds.”

The ruling, consistent with previous court decisions, means that “certain decisions on revenue and expenditure must remain in the hands of Parliament,” Ms. Koch said. “That is fundamental for the democratic state. You can transfer competencies to a certain extent. You can’t transfer them completely.”

In Parliament on Wednesday, Mrs. Merkel renewed her opposition to the idea of issuing eurobonds as a means of solving the debt crisis. “Eurobonds are the way to a union of debtors,” she said, calling the idea “the wrong answer. That is why we will not go down this route.”

The court rejected three appeals against the legality of earlier bailouts, which have stirred a furious political debate among Germans. The suits had been brought by a coalition of German lawmakers, economists and business executives who argued that Germany’s participation in loans and support funds for Greece undermined Parliament and infringed constitutional provisions underpinning the country’s democracy.

German parliamentarians welcomed the ruling. “I am particularly pleased,” Wolfgang Bosbach, a leading member of Mrs. Merkel’s governing Christian Democrats said, adding that he hoped would end the divisions inside the center-right coalition over the rescue package and speculation on whether Greece should be expelled from the euro zone.

Nicholas Kulish reported from Karlsruhe, and Alan Cowell from Paris. Judy Dempsey and Victor Homola contributed reporting from Berlin, and Jack Ewing from Frankfurt.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: September 7, 2011

An earlier version of this article misstated the university where Donald P. Kommers is emeritus professor of political science and law. It is Notre Dame, not Duke.

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U.S. Economy Grew Slower in Spring Than Reported

Fewer exports and weaker growth in business stockpiles led the government to lower its growth estimate for the April-June quarter from the initial 1.3 percent rate.

The economy expanded only 0.7 percent in the first six months of the year, the agency said.

Nine of the last 11 recessions since World War II have been preceded by a period of growth of 1 percent or less, economists note.

“The economy is teetering on the edge of a renewed recession,” said James Marple, an economist at TD Securities. “Any renewed shock could push the economy over the edge.”

Economists said the revision had not changed their growth forecasts. Most expect slightly better growth — roughly 1.5 to 2 percent — in the second half of the year.

That level of growth would likely cool recession jitters. But it is not enough to make a noticeable dent in the unemployment rate, which was 9.1 percent in July.

Some economists worry that this summer’s sell-off on Wall Street could hamper growth further if consumers and businesses pull back on spending and investment. The stock market has lost 12 percent of its value since July 21.

There were some good signs in the report. Corporate profits rose faster than in the previous quarter. The decline in business stockpiles suggests factories may step up production to fill future orders.

The revision also showed consumers and businesses spent a bit more in the spring than in the government’s first estimate. Consumers spent more on health care, insurance and financial services. Businesses bought more equipment and software and invested in more buildings.

Consumer spending was revised up to a 0.4 percent gain, slightly better than the first estimate of 0.1 percent. Still, that is the weakest growth since the final three months of 2009.

People bought fewer long-lasting manufactured goods, such as autos and appliances. Those purchases fell 5.1 percent this spring, the biggest drop since the fall of 2008. That partly reflects a shortage of autos on many dealer lots after the March 11 earthquake in Japan. Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of growth.

Government spending contracted for the third straight quarter. And spending by state and local governments declined for the seventh time in eight quarters.

Corporate profits remained healthy, as they have throughout the recovery. They rose 3 percent, up from a 1 percent gain in the first quarter.

Several dismal economic reports have suggested the economy worsened in the July-September quarter, sending the stock market lower. Manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic region contracted in August by the most in more than two years, a survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found. A Richmond Fed survey released Tuesday and a New York Fed survey last week also pointed to slowdowns in those areas, although not as severe.

Still, other reports offer a more optimistic picture. The economy added 117,000 net jobs in July, twice the number added in each of the previous two months. Consumers spent more on retail goods last month than in any month since March. Automakers rebounded last month to increase factory production by the most since the Japan crisis.

Thursday’s report is the second of three estimates the government issues for each quarter’s economic growth. The estimates are updated with more recent data that was not available for the first report.

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