Word: gainsbrugh
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...that by the end of 1963 the U.S. will be producing 30% more than it did five years ago, and that the gross national product will be in the neighborhood of $590 billion-an average of nearly $8,500 worth of goods and services for every working American. Economist Gainsbrugh-joined by many a businessman and economist-looks farther ahead to the time when the frustrated promise of the Soaring Sixties will be fulfilled. "I'm firmly convinced," he says, "that the economic models we built for the 19603 will still prove out, and will give...
...could even be that economic forecasting has reached the point where its validity is so generally accepted that businessmen move to cancel out the economists' predictions before anyone has a chance to see whether they will turn out right. "In this sense," says New York Economist Martin Gainsbrugh dryly, "forecasts are at times self-defeating...
...Martin Gainsbrugh, Chief Economist, National Industrial Conference Board: The high rate of inventory liquidation in recent months coupled with the strength of end-product demand may well have marked the low point of the contraction...
...President's Economic Report. George Cline Smith, chief economist of F. W. Dodge Corp., and Peter Henle, assistant research director of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., agreed that Ike's forecasts of a national output of $510 billion in 1960 is right on the line. Martin R. Gainsbrugh, chief economist of the National Industrial Conference Board, and Roy L. Reierson, chief economist of Bankers Trust Co., took an even more sanguine view: they believe that the gross national product may well climb as high as $520 billion...
...survey of corporate appropriations by the National Industrial Conference Board points to "a sustained rise" in outlays. The board's Chief Economist Martin R. Gainsbrugh told the Congressional Joint Economic Committee that the upswing will be "well timed" for the long-term recovery, show its greatest momentum in the second half...