OUTLOOK: Slower, but No 'Pause'

It has been a poor year for pessimism. Their outlook chilled by the frigid winter's possible impact on the recovery, many economists scaled down their growth forecasts for the year's first quarter. What happened? Business expanded at a robust rate. In the second quarter, when President Carter dropped his $50 tax rebate stimulus proposal, some seers again lowered their sights—and again were proved wrong. Last week the Commerce Department reported that in the three months ending in June, the nation's real gross national product grew at a healthy annual rate of 6.4%. That compares favorably with the first quarter's growth, which last week was revised upward from 6.9% to 7.5%.

The main propellants in the second-quarter advance were increased government spending and capital investment and steady growth in new home construction. They were enough to offset a leveling off in retail sales, which accounted for much of the snap and ginger in the economy in the first quarter.

Rapid Rate. The first-half surge is a bit of beginners' luck for the Carter Administration, which took over at the ragged end of a painful business slowdown and, without having made any radical changes in the Ford Administration's policy, now finds itself at the helm of a briskly moving economy. Few experts expect the first half s rapid rate of growth to continue through the second half—though nobody is forecasting anything like a recession. Charles Schultze, the President's chief economic adviser, forecasts a steady if unspectacular 5% rate of expansion for the rest of the year, and most other economists agree. A bearish minority, however, fears that the economy could be in for a more substantial slide. Says Tom Dernburg, senior economist of the Congressional Joint Economic Committee: "I'm just not convinced that the economy is going to end up looking as bright as the Administration claims."

Even with a slide in output of goods and services, inflation is not likely to wane. The Administration has reckoned that living costs for the year would rise an average of 6.5%. But last week the Government reported that in June consumer prices continued to rise at the high May annual rate—7.4%. The main factor: higher price tags on processed foods such as dairy items and canned goods. Further dimming prospects for price relief, U.S. Steel, the industry leader, unexpectedly announced last week that it would raise prices on structural shapes and tin mill products by 6% to 7% effective Sept. 4. In addition, the House last week followed the Senate's lead and approved a measure raising the wheat support price for farmers from $2.47 to $2.90 per bu. The move would add at least $470 million to the cost of the price-support program.

A second-half slowdown would scarcely improve chances of significantly reducing the unemployment rate, now at 7.1%. If the economy grows no faster than 5%, the best Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal could offer last week was a reduction in joblessness to a still high 6.75% by the end of 1977.

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MANOJ, a police officer stationed in Mumbai, on why he and other police don't criticize their leaders for failing to meet promises to improve dire working conditions after last fall's deadly attacks on the Taj hotel

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