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Falling interest rates,
smaller increases in the foreign trade deficit, and I.R.S. refund checks should
combine to boost national economic growth in the second quarter. Along with
spring weather, these factors should also spur growth in the
Central Wisconsin economy in the months ahead. There are, however,
factors which will moderate this growth. Problems in the region's important
insurance industry and the after shock of plant closings in the Wausau area are likely to limit any employment
gains in the second quarter. The Wausau area economy, in particular, will be
hard pressed to expand job opportunities in the months immediately ahead. The
outlook is brighter for the Stevens Point and Wisconsin Rapids areas.
Planned expansions by major employers in both local economies should fuel
growth.
The current business cycle
has now reached the stage where the development of a recession can occur
quickly. Experts have always had great difficulty in predicting when turning
points in the cycle will occur. Although most economists do not see a recession
developing in 1985, the emergence of an economic downturn becomes increasingly
likely as the expansion ages. Back in the 1960s, President Johnson argued that
recessions are not inevitable. Twenty years later, few are so bold.
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