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If the government report Friday shows slower job growth, too, the Federal Reserve would be less inclined to scale back its pace of bond buying, economists said. The Fed is purchasing about $85 billion in Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds each month in an effort keep interest rates low. Minutes of the past meeting showed that several members favored reducing the bond purchases if the economy demonstrates strong and sustained growth. And Chairman Ben Bernanke told a congressional panel last month that the Fed could slow the pace of the bond purchases over the next few meetings, if the job market shows "real and sustainable progress." Economists forecast growth is slowing to around a 2 percent annual pace in the April-June quarter, down from 2.4 percent in the first three months of the year. Consumers and businesses are likely slowing their spending because of the tax increases and spending cuts. And weaker global growth has reduced demand for U.S. exports, which has slowed activity at U.S. factories.
[Associated
Press;
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