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Heightening the uncertainty are Europe's debt crisis and the possibility that China's efforts to tame inflation will slow its booming economy. Both factors could destabilize financial markets and reduce U.S. exports, one of the economy's few strengths. "Why would an employer hire now?" Mayland says. "It's hunker down and wait and see." The Federal Reserve has already lowered short-term interest rates to near zero. And last month, it ended a Treasury bond-purchase program that was intended to strengthen the economy. Congress, pointing to high budget deficits, won't consider spending taxpayer money to jolt the economy with new government programs. "We have painted ourselves into a corner," Mayland says. "When you're at zero interest rates and running a $1.5 trillion deficit, you don't really have many policy options." Many analysts say the economy mainly needs time to recover from an implosion of the real estate market and a devastating financial crisis. Normally, housing and construction would fuel a recovery. Lower interest rates would draw homebuyers into the market. Increased demand would encourage builders to hire construction workers and put up new houses. Not so this time. Home prices are continuing to fall as banks dump foreclosed homes on the market. People's home equity has shrunk. The tepid recovery is taking a toll on consumers, whose spending accounts for 70 percent of economic activity. The Conference Board business group said last week that its consumer confidence index fell to 58.5 in June. A healthy reading is 90. At this point after the previous three recessions, the index averaged 87. The low reading suggests consumers will be wary about spending. That could leave businesses even more cautious about hiring. Businesses are nervous about the economic outlook now that the Fed and Congress seem to have ended their efforts to stimulate growth, says David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff + Associates. "The policy cupboard is pretty bare, and we can see what the emperor looks like disrobed," Rosenberg says. "It's not a pretty picture."
[Associated
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