Is 2014 the recovery year?

Economic forecasters generally think 2014 will "be a breakout year" for the U.S. economy

Janet Yellen
(Image credit: (Alex Wong/Getty Images))

Will 2014 "be a breakout year" for the U.S. economy? asked Sudeep Reddy at The Wall Street Journal. Economic forecasters generally think it will be. If businesses can finally "shed their caution" and plow cash into hiring new staff and investing in equipment, "a slowly improving jobs picture and rising household wealth could spark a virtuous cycle of stronger consumer spending, increased business confidence, and rising investment." But lurking uncertainties could still turn 2014 into "another letdown." A new standoff in Congress over the federal debt limit, for example, could put an unnecessary drag on the economy. And the Federal Reserve's new leader, Janet Yellen, has to negotiate a difficult "path out of bond buying." The Fed will be under the microscope as it scales back its current $75 billion–a-month quantitative easing program, a process that has the potential to "upset markets at just about every turn."

There are other red flags, too, said Tim Mullaney at USA Today. Wage growth remains tepid, interest rates are rising, and capital investment is still stubbornly low. But there are grounds for optimism in low inflation, a pickup in hiring by state and local governments, and most importantly a surging housing market, which is "the top reason the recovery feels different this year." The signs are promising that we'll see a surge in new construction, and "a housing market near the high end of forecasts could generate a million new jobs, pushing unemployment down by 0.7 of a percentage point or more."

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Sergio Hernandez is business editor of The Week's print edition. He has previously worked for The DailyProPublica, the Village Voice, and Gawker.