- Posted September 23, 2013
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Measure of U.S. economy's health up 0.7 percent
By Martin Crutsinger
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A gauge of the U.S. economy's future health posted a solid gain in August, signaling stronger growth in coming months.
The Conference Board said last Thursday that its index of leading indicators increased 0.7 percent in August from July. That followed a 0.5 percent gain in July from June.
The index is designed to signal economic conditions over the next three to six months.
Conference Board economists said that the solid gains in July and August were a good sign following an earlier slowdown.
"The latest reading points to more pep in the pace of economic activity in the near term," said Conference Board economist Ken Goldstein. "One unknown is how resilient confidence will remain, both consumer and business, given the mixed signals from the housing and labor markets."
Goldstein said another unknown is how confidence will be affected by the upcoming debates over passing a federal budget to avoid a government shutdown and raising the borrowing ceiling to avoid a market-rattling default on the government's debt.
The gain in the index in August was driven by strength in the labor market and financial sectors as well as by rising manufacturing orders. There was weakness in residential construction and consumer expectations.
Published: Mon, Sep 23, 2013
headlines Oakland County
- Law school hosts Moot Court Winter 2026 In-House Competition
- Man pleads no contest to false report or threat of terrorism, aggravated stalking and habitual offender fourth
- ABA Formal Opinion 522 provides guidance on a lawyer’s duty to disclose grounds for judicial disqualification
- Webinar looks into ‘Building Stronger Traffic Data’
- District court discourse
headlines National
- Judge grants stay in February 2025 California bar examinees’ case against ProctorU
- Blake Lively’s sexual harassment claims against Justin Baldoni face legal setback
- TikTok creator sued by immigration firm, accused of making defamatory comments online
- 15 attorney killings remain unsolved, Baja California Bar Association says
- ABA amicus brief supports law firms targeted by executive orders
- Legal services provider 8am and NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers announce partnership




