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U.S. recession seen ending in third quarter

By Lucia Mutikani Lucia Mutikani Mon Aug 10, 1:20 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) The worst U.S. recession since the Great Depression will

probably end in the third quarter, but uncertainty exists over the speed and

duration of the economic recovery, according to the most recent survey of

private economists.

The Blue Chip Economic Indicators survey of private economists released on

Monday showed about 90 percent of the respondents surveyed believe the economic

downturn will be declared to have ended this quarter.

This upbeat assessment followed recent government data showing gross domestic

product (GDP) contracted at a shallow 1.0 percent rate in the second quarter

after sinking 6.4 percent in the January-March quarter.

Recent data, including housing and key labor market indicators, have suggested

a bottoming in the recession and the economy close to turning the corner. The

economy slipped into recession in December 2007.

The Blue Chip survey's findings are broadly in line with a Reuters poll

published last month, which predicted growth in the third quarter, though a

brisk pace of expansion was not expected until late 2010.

"Debate now centers on the speed, strength and durability of the recovery," the

survey said.

It showed nearly two-thirds of respondents believed the economy was set for a

U-shaped recovery, marked by below-trend growth in gross domestic product

before stronger growth took hold in the second half of 2010.

About 17 percent of the respondents anticipated a V-shaped rebound, where

growth pulled back to its trend rate on a sustained basis, while the same

percentage fretted that a W-shaped recovery could follow, the survey showed.

"In their view, GDP growth will pop higher for a quarter or two only to falter

again before a lasting recovery takes hold," the survey said.

HIGHER GDP GROWTH

Growth in the second half was expected to garner support from a reduction in

the pace of business inventory liquidation, marginal improvements in consumer

spending and residential investment. The survey predicted that non-residential

investment, however, would remain a drag on GDP.

Despite the improved economic picture, unemployment was expected to remain a

problem, with the jobless rate predicted to peak at just over 10 percent late

this year or early 2010, the survey showed. It was seen falling only slowly

thereafter.

Government data on Friday showed the unemployment rate nudged down to 9.4

percent in July from 9.5 percent in June, but mostly because many people

dropped out of the labor force.

"About 70 percent of the panelists believe the jobless rate will not dip below

7.0 percent on a sustained basis until the second half of 2012 or later," the

survey said.

However, job losses could fade late this year or early 2010 and payrolls start

to expand as companies rebuild inventories, which should lengthen the workweek,

according to the survey.

The weak labor market, together with excess capacity in many business sectors

were seen dampening inflation pressures.

"Consumer price inflation, excluding food and energy costs, will increase by

slightly less in 2010 than in 2009," the survey said.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Theodore d'Afflisio)