Money / recession Economists Lean Closer to the R-Word Almost half on US panel predict recession, up from 25% last year By Jim O'Neill, Newser Staff Posted Feb 25, 2008 7:09 PM CST Copied Construction workers carry pipe on a site where new homes are being built Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2007, in Fremont, Calif. Home sales continue to be a weak spot in the economy. (Associated Press) An panel of US economists leaned closer to predicting recession today after grappling with a slew of scary data, the AP reports. More than half of analysts at the National Association for Business Economics maintained that a downturn is still unlikely, but 45% expected recession in 2008; only a quarter saw a 35% chance of recession in a report last September. All agreed that the economy will contract through June, with GDP growing at a paltry 1.8%. The group also predicted a second-half rebound due to Washington's $168 billion economic stimulus package and Fed rate cuts. Other NABE forecasts include: The Fed will cut its federal funds rate rate to 2.5%. The Consumer Price Index will climb by 2.5%. Oil will drop to $84 by year's end. Unemployment will rise from 4.6% last year to 5.2%. Click on the links below to read more about NABE's predictions. (More recession stories.) Report an error