LOS ANGELES, Oct. 5 (Xinhua) -- Even after passage of
the Bush administration's 700-billion-dollar financial rescue plan Friday, the
United States' economic options span the unappealing gamut from bad to worse, a
newspaper report said on Sunday.
Even if the financial bailout works, the economy
faces troubles too pervasive and entrenched to be solved any time soon, the Los
Angeles Times said.
"While Americans have spent the last month transfixed
by the spectacle of one financial giant after another crashing to the ground,
the rest of the U.S. economy has been sinking in the muck," the paper noted.
"The wheels seem to be coming off the economy right
now," Brian P. Sack, vice president of the respected forecasting firm of
Macroeconomic Advisers, was quoted as saying. "It's hard to see how we avoid a
recession, and it could prove a tough one to climb out of."
Even if the financial bailout plan begins to work,
the nation will be lucky if all it experiences is a bad slowdown, said the
paper.
The alternative, economists say, is something much
worse -- a contraction that might go on for years.
The paper listed the following signs that bode ill
for the economy:
-- The government reported that American employers
sliced September payrolls by 159,000 jobs, the ninth straight month of losses
and one that puts the country on track to shed a million jobs this year;
-- Consumers, who account for more than two-thirds of
the nation's total economic activity and who boosted their spending earlier in
the year thanks in part to more than 100-billion-dollarin government stimulus
checks, have reversed course and begun cutting expenditures, prompting real
consumption, after adjustment for inflation, to slip two-tenths of a point in
June, a half-point in July and flat-lined in August;
-- Manufacturers, many of whom had managed to profit
because the weak U.S. dollar helped boost exports, have seen their business
begin to dry up in recent months, with new factory orders unexpectedly dropping
4 percent in August, the biggest decline in two years and capital goods orders,
an indicator of companies' future investment plans, slipping 2.4 percent, the
biggest drop in more than a year and a half; and
-- Governments, especially state governments, have
begun making steep cuts, with 29 of the 50 states having already cut spending,
raising taxes or tapping emergency funds to balance their budgets for the fiscal
year that began July 1.
The combination of consumers hunkering down,
manufacturers losing orders and states making cuts has economists slashing their
growth forecasts for the coming months and years, the paper said.