According to a Reuters.com article citing a study from the UCLA Anderson  Forecast group, U.S unemployment rates will remain high over the next  year, as the economy recovers at a slower than expected pace. 
 
"Specifically, we forecast that  after growing at 2.8 percent in the most recent and current quarters,  real GDP growth will settle into a 2 percent growth path for much of  2010 and be closer to 3 percent in 2011," the forecasting unit  said in its report.
"With such sluggish growth, the  unemployment rate will likely peak at 10.5 percent in the first quarter  and remain at or above 10 percent for almost all of next year,"  the closely watched report added.
For many, the tough jobs market will  obscure how the economy will be regaining its footing. "Things  will be improving but it won't be obvious to people on Main Street,"  said David Shulman, a senior economist with the UCLA Anderson unit.
 
"People won't be spending aggressively  and people will be worrying about their jobs," he said. "It'll  be a long, slow healing process."
Shulman said his unit's outlook mirrors Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's comments on Monday. Bernanke said the recovery remained fragile and unemployment may be high for some time, cooling talk of an early rise in interest rates fueled by a surprise fall in the jobless rate reported last week.
