The Kauffman Foundation published today the new quarterly survey of leading economic bloggers and the General outlook from this group is that there is "a bit of hope" Gust on the horizon, according to a press release. Capital Spectator are surveyed.
Some extracts of the report ...
? Bloggers economy is less pessimistic in their outlook on the American economy than at the end of 2010, although 77 percent believe total conditions are mixed, facing a recession or depression. For an economy where growth is the norm, 31% of respondents believe that the American economy is worse than the official statistics indicate, and only 10 percent, believe is appropriate. When asked to describe the economy with five adjectives, uncertain remains the term most commonly used to describe the economy.
? The number of competing explanations for the recovery of the unemployed can be a bit mind-numbing, but the list of bloggers in economics had a very strong emotions were true and that it was not. Away and the most popular explanation (with a 95 percent agreeing and full majority agreeing strongly) was the reluctance of companies to recruit in an uncertain macroeconomic. Two other explanations have been supported by four-to-one margin: a structural change in the demand for work (e.g., more knowledge, jobs and a secular decline in muscle jobs) and a general decline in aggregate demand. This means that bloggers, I think both recessionary ananeoymena and technological change in the economy is to blame, either face each other. The two ideas rejected bloggers are (1) the theory that associations and employees have lost negotiating power, and (2) the USA wealth has grown labor-Recreation Association, to the extent that people will be more willing to tolerate, leaving their labour force.
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