NBC Survey: Economists, Money Managers Expect Tax Cuts to Generate a Huge Boost to Growth
Private sector economists and market strategists are much more optimistic than government forecasters when it comes to the prospect of tax cuts generating economic growth.
CNBC’s Fed Survey asked 44 Fed watchers–including money managers, strategists, and economists–about the tax cuts. On average, respondents see tax cuts boosting growth by roughly half a percentage point this year, next year, and by a similar amount over the next decade.
That would put growth much closer to the Trump administration’s projected growth of 2.9 percent than the forecast of the Joint Committee on Taxation, Congresss’s nonpartisan scorekeeper for tax bills. Its’ analysis projected that tax cuts would add less than a 10th of a percentage point each year.
The respondents are also very confident tax reform will be passed by Congress. Just over 70 percent think the tax cuts will pass this year, with another 25 percent or so saying that it will pass next month.
"I'm 80 years old and I want results now," the Jets dismissed Coach Pete Carroll today after one season and replaced him with Rich Kotite.
"I'm entitled to some enjoyment, and that means winning," said Hess today, virtually branding the team as quitters under Carroll for their late-season collapse. Their five straight defeats insured a losing record for the 18th time in 35 seasons and entrenched the Jets' reputation as a perennial losing franch