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There have been signs of some improvements: home sales have firmed: construction activity has picked up
-- albeit off record-low levels; consumer spending has stabilized following a massive cutback at the end of last year; layoffs are slowing and some credit stresses have eased. Even after the recession ends, the recovery is likely to be tepid, which will push unemployment higher. The nation's unemployment rate -- now at 9.4 percent -- is expected to keep climbing into 2010. Acknowledging that the jobless rate is going to climb over 10 percent, President Barack Obama said Tuesday he's not satisfied with the progress his administration has made on the economy. He defended his recovery package but said the aid must get out faster. Some analysts say the rate could rise as high as 11 percent by the next summer before it starts to decline. The highest rate since World War II was 10.8 percent at the end of 1982. An index measuring chief executives' business expectations showed an improved outlook from last quarter's record low, but many still expect declines in sales, jobs and capital spending. "We don't see continued free fall," Ivan G. Seidenberg, chairman of the Business Roundtable and CEO of Verizon Communications, said Tuesday. "But nobody's ready to suggest they're going to begin hiring." The weak economy, so far, has kept a lid on inflation. Consumer prices inched up 0.1 percent in May, but are down 1.3 percent over the last 12 months, the weakest annual showing since the 1950s. Bernanke and other Fed officials don't think companies will be in any position to jack up prices given cautious consumers, big production cuts at factories and the weak employment climate. Obama said Tuesday that Bernanke was doing a fine job under difficult circumstances, but he declined to say whether he will reappoint the Fed chairman in January. Bernanke took over the Fed in February 2006 after serving as President George W. Bush's chief economist. His term will expire early next year. Bernanke
-- a student of the Great Depression who spent most of his professional life in academia
-- has elicited praise and controversy for his radical efforts to lift the country out of recession and end the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.
[Associated
Press;
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