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Economic outlooks project recovery likely – benefiting election winner

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“The two parties are offering all sugar and no medicine solutions,” Harris said. “Neither party comes out of the election with a clear mandate. You only have a mandate if you have specific proposals.”

The business sector is anxious – and weighing in.

Boeing chairman and CEO Jim McNerney told reporters in a conference call that chief executives “wouldn’t be uncomfortable” with some tax increases if the overall package included larger spending cuts. He specifically cited a proposal by a commission headed former Republican Sen. Alan Simpson and Democrat Erskine Bowles that would provide $3 in spending cuts for every $1 in additional revenues.

Success is critical.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has concluded that the drastic cuts and tax increases that Congress and Obama agreed to confront at year’s end in order to force action on a more temperate debt-control package would lead to a recession in 2013 and drive up unemployment to 9 percent or more.

If the “cliff” is avoided with a more modest package that doesn’t strike so fast, economists see a much rosier scenario. Moody’s Analytics projects gross domestic product, the main measure of the economy, to grow at a 4 percent clip or more in 2014, compared to less than 2 percent so far this year, and unemployment to fall to 5.6 percent in 2016.

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