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...Board of Economists, who gathered in Manhattan to chart the probable course of the recovery over the next year or so. It was a spirited session marked by unusually sharp arguments between conservatives and liberals, and even some quarrels on specific points between ideological allies. Republicans Murray Weidenbaum and Beryl Sprinkel insisted that the recovery could keep going through 1976 and beyond with no more stimulus than the Ford Administration now plans, which will probably include acceptance of an extension of this year's temporary tax cuts. They believe any effort to force-feed greater growth could be severely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OUTLOOK/TIME BOARD OF ECONOMISTS: A Quickening Recovery Faces Danger | 9/22/1975 | See Source »

Slow Ahead? How much higher will interest rates go? Some economists, among them Citibank's Leif Olsen, believe that short-term rates-now at 7¾% in the case of the prime rate-may rise another .25 to .5 percentage points. Chicago Banker Beryl Sprinkel, a member of TIME'S Board of Economists, foresees an increase "perhaps to 8½% by year's end." Meanwhile, Chase Econometrics, a subsidiary of the Chase Manhattan Bank, believes short-term rates could go another one to 1¼ percentage points higher. If the cost of money does indeed reach that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE RECOVERY: More Sweet and Sour Signs | 9/8/1975 | See Source »

Republicans Beryl Sprinkel and Murray Weidenbaum insist that more fiscal and monetary stimuli would pep up the recovery only at the price of re-igniting inflation. The rate of consumer price increases has dropped from 12% in 1974 to 3.7% in March; that may have been a fluke, but Eckstein expects it to average 4% to 6% for all of 1976. Sprinkel, however, is concerned that a stepped-up recovery would send inflation up again in 1977, forcing the Goveminent to crack down on demand; that would cause production to fall and unemployment to rise once more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OUTLOOK/BOARD OF ECONOMISTS: The Upturn: Sensational, But Lousy | 5/26/1975 | See Source »

...down for an instant replay for the home folks at Houston's Rice Hotel. Bentsen, 54, became the fifth Democrat on a list that could contain more than ten names before the longest presidential campaign in American history ends 20 months from now.* Flanked by his parents, Wife Beryl Ann, 53, and three children-Lloyd III, 30, Lan, 27, and Tina, 23-Bentsen told some 1,800 cheering supporters that he would bring his 26 years of political and business experience to the restoration "of an economic system which provides diversity of opportunity for earning a living and gives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEMOCRATS: Five and Still Counting | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

...lock, stock and barrel, the net stimulus today would be zero." Adds Arthur Okun of the Brookings Institution: "The entire reason for that deficit is that the economy is in terrible shape, and is knocking hell out of revenues and increasing federal expenditures for unemployment and other things." Banker Beryl Sprinkel, one of the few Board members to disagree, argues that the budget figures are "realistic if we have high among our priorities keeping this inflation under significant control...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TIME'S BOARD OF ECONOMISTS: Bigger Tax Cuts for Faster Recovery | 2/17/1975 | See Source »

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