National Post (National Edition)

U.S. growth to slow in 2019: CBO

- Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON •U.s.economic growth will probably accelerate this year before slowing in 2019 to well below the Trump administra­tion’s three-per-cent target as a fiscal stimulus fades, congressio­nal researcher­s projected on Monday.

In an updated economic outlook, the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO) projected that inflation adjusted or real gross domestic product (GDP) would grow 3.1 per cent this year, exceeding 2.2-per-cent growth in 2017 due to lower income taxes, increased government spending and private investment.

The government slashed corporate and personal income taxes in January in a Us$1.5-trillion package and the U.S. Congress passed a Us$1.3-trillion spending bill in March.

This has buoyed consumer and business spending as well as government outlays, which combined with accelerate­d soybean exports to lift the economy to a 4.1-per-cent annualized rate in the second quarter from a 2.2-per-cent pace in the January-march period. The April-june growth rate was the highest in nearly four years.

But the CBO said it expected growth to slow in the second half as jolts to consumer spending and agricultur­al exports either fade or reverse. For instance, some second-quarter soybean exports were aimed at beating Chinese tariffs that took effect in July and cut future shipments.

“In 2019, the pace of GDP growth slows to 2.4 per cent in the agency’s forecast, as growth in business investment and government purchases slows,” CBO director Keith Hall said in a statement.

Republican­s have said the tax cuts, which increased the nation’s debt, would pay for themselves through strong economic growth. The Trump administra­tion has said the economy can sustain three-per-cent growth over the long term, an assertion many economists have disputed.

The CBO also cautioned that trade tensions could make a bigger dent on GDP growth than anticipate­d. An escalating U.s.-china trade war could result in tariffs on all goods traded between the world’s two largest economies.

Washington also has instituted tariffs with the European Union, Canada and Mexico.

“When CBO completed this economic forecast in early July, the agency estimated that the macroecono­mic consequenc­es of the U.S. tariffs and foreign retaliator­y tariffs that had been implemente­d at that time would be small,” said Hall.

Tariffs then “affected goods that accounted for less than 1.5 per cent of the total value of U.S. trade. However, trade policy has already changed since early July and may continue to evolve, so the effects of new tariffs may become more substantia­l and have a larger effect on the economy than CBO accounted for in its current projection­s.”

From 2023 to 2028, the CBO forecast the economy growing by about 1.7 per cent each year.

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