Word: outputted
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...shock of White Friday, however, could indirectly reduce Brazil's output over the longer run. The Brazilian government is eager to see coffee planting moved northward, away from the danger of frost, so it may encourage growers in Paraná and São Paulo to switch to soybeans. But if new areas of cultivation do not open up quickly, Brazil's exportable crop, which accounted for 32% of the world coffee trade in 1974-75, could fall drastically...
...economy at last seems unmistakably to be recovering from recession; many economists now think that an expected tapering off in business inventory cutting alone almost guarantees growth in U.S. output at an annual rate of about 7% for the rest of 1975. Nonetheless, the long road back to full prosperity contains many potential pitfalls, which were all too evident last week. President Ford finally produced a plan for gradual decontrol of oil prices that has a chance of passing Congress, but some threat remains of an abrupt jolt to the economy when present controls expire Aug. 31. A June spurt...
...peacock colors in which Warhol packaged Mao's face had all the lushness that one associates with the most edible commercial art. The whole enterprise was about as subversive as a department-store window display, and it set the tone for the rest of Warhol's output...
...between the White House and the Democratic Congress over what kind of controls, if any, to maintain. Last week President Ford sent Congress his long-awaited plan to phase out controls over a 30-month period. He hopes that the resulting rise in prices will greatly stimulate domestic oil output without hurting the economy. Congress is likely to turn down that plan; critics charge it would drain $45 billion in potential consumer purchasing power out of the economy over the next two years...
...presently controlled, but they almost surely cannot pass such a bill over an inevitable presidential veto. That leaves the possibility of a straight extension of price controls-perhaps for six months-but Administration aides warn that Ford might veto that too, because he believes controls only discourage domestic output and keep the U.S. dependent on OPEC...