e Micigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 59-2 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, August 11, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages economists predict surge in economy ByJOHN ADAM Daily staff writer The nation's economy will recover from its current-recession and enter a period of rapid growth by the end of the year, a team of University economists predicted in a report released yester- day. The growth period is expected to be accompanied by slowing inflation, sharp improvement in unemployment rates, and record federal budget deficits much greater than those en- visioned in the Reagan ad- ministration's budget plans. THE FORECAST is based on the econometric model constructed by the University Research Seminar in Quan- titative Economics, directed by economics and statistics Prof. Saul Hymans. University President Harold Shapiro, and Economists Joan Crary, a research scientist, and Prof. E. Philip Howrey aided Hymans in this update of the Economic Outlook issued last November. Basically, two things have changed since the November report, Hymans explained. The four researchers now know the dimensions of the gover- nment's fiscal program since Reagan's tax and budget proposals were recently passed by Congress. And the Federal Reserve has held to a stricter monetary policy than the team of researchers orignially forecast. THIS TIGHT monetary policy with its high interest rates is the cause of the current small recession, Hymans said. "But the recession will be minor and over at the end of the year." Boy injured by'U' bus Ambulance attendants care for 12-year-old Donald Moore after he collided with a University bus on his bicycle yesterday afternoon. Moore, of Ann Ar- bor, was riding at "top bicycle speed," police saidacross the Diag toward the intersection of State St. and William St. when he ran off the curb and into the rear right side of a bus. The bus had just started up after being stopped at the light. Moore was reportedly in good condition at University hospital, where he was taken, and was expected to be released later last night. Hymans ... forecasts a sharp upturn The short run economic outlook as outlined in the forecast, appears rather bright. INFLATION-In the absence of adver- se supply shocks in areas such as food prices; crude oil prices, and spot shor- tages of raw industrial materials, the rate of inflation will continue to edge downward. During the first half of next year the annual inflation rate is forecast to be 7.1 percent, dropping fur- ther to 6.8 percent in the second half of the year. U NE MP LOY ME NT-T he une m- ployment rate, is predicted to rise See PERIOD, Page 2 LSA 's new dean faces dhe Schallenge of axing $471,000 e By PAMELA KRAMER Daily staff writer Although University administrators say the most dramatic budget cuts in LSA are over, the College's belt still needs to be tightened by $471,048 during the coming year on the University's road to "smaller but better." LSA's new dean, Peter Steiner, in office for only slightly more than a month, discussed how those ad- ditional cuts would be made. "WE WERE GIVEN a major reduction to achieve, and we were unable to achieve it in one year," Steiner explained. So the College "in a couple of different ways borrowed money" to buy time for making the required cutbacks. In a letter to LSA faculty members released last June, then-Acting Dean John Knott said, "The six percent cut in the College's base budget confronted us last fall with a $2,187,795 problem." Officials tried to solve that problem by putting a hiring freeze on open faculty positions, planning varying reductions for in- dividual departments, and eliminating the geography department altogether. BUT EVEN AFTER those plans were set down on paper, and after Vice President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye reduced the size of the required LSA budget cut by $300,000, the College is still left with the task of cutting an additional $471,048 to meet its 1981-82 goal. "I consider the problem very serious, but not im- possible," Dean Steiner said. "Smaller but better means we can't do everything. (These times) force difficult choices on us." STEINER SAID he hopes "perhaps to postpone" some of the cuts in the LSA budget for a year through taking out more loans. Beyond that, he said, "there will be a reduction in the size of the faculty, but not through random attrition." Some LSA departments will be given contraction goals to meet during the next few years, and most of the cuts will occur at the departmental level, accor- ding to Steiner. Students will have input to the See NEW, Page 4