Windsor Star

Consumer spending propping up struggling American economy

- CARLOS TORRES AND LISA DU with assistance from Victoria Stilwell and Shobhana Chandra Bloomberg

WASHINGTON The U.S. economy stumbled in the first half of 2016 as companies retrenched, leaving consumers to shoulder the burden of sustaining growth heading into the presidenti­al election.

A 4.2 per cent gain in household purchases in the second quarter, among the biggest of the current expansion, was the lone bright spot in an otherwise bleary picture as the economy had its worst first half since 2011. Businesses hunkered down, trimming inventorie­s and reducing outlays on equipment and constructi­on projects, while government agencies also cut back. That limited the gain in gross domestic product last quarter to a 1.2 per cent annualized rate, figures from the Commerce Department showed Friday, less than half the advance projected by economists in a Bloomberg survey.

While the magnitude of the surge in consumer spending is unlikely to be sustained, a strong job market will probably give Americans the means to keep driving growth as Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump spar over who’ll lead the world’s largest economy. A contentiou­s election and uncertain global growth prospects call into question whether companies will keep hiring and be more willing to invest.

“I don’t think U.S. consumers can continue to do the kind of heavy lifting that they have done,” said Millan Mulraine, deputy head of U.S. research and strategy for TD Securities USA LLC in New York. “It means we must have some hand off of that work from consumers to business investment in particular.”

Personal spending added 2.83 percentage points to secondquar­ter growth, while business investment, trade and government spending together subtracted 1.61 percentage points. That 4.4-point spread is the widest between the two groups since the end of 2001.

The passing of that baton is a shaky propositio­n given “the global uncertaint­y or even election uncertaint­y,” said Mulraine.

Last quarter’s disappoint­ing gain in GDP followed a 0.8 per cent advance the prior three months that was even smaller than previously estimated. The average one per cent growth rate so far this year was the weakest first half since 2011. The Commerce Department’s report also included revisions to data going back to 2013. The updated numbers showed a more pronounced slowdown in the economy heading into 2016. The year-over-year growth rate cooled from 3.3 per cent in the first quarter of 2015 to 1.9 per cent in the fourth quarter.

The year-over-year decelerati­on continued into 2016, reaching 1.2 per cent in the second quarter, the worst performanc­e since 2013. The slowdown may also change the calculus for the Federal Reserve, which has been trying to time its next interest rate hike. Earlier this week the U.S. central bank signalled the potential for an increase.

The negative surprise “cuts the legs out from under our September Fed hike call,” Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd in New York, wrote in a note to clients.

Some economists were more sanguine. Now that companies have cut back on the amount of goods on hand, any subsequent gains in consumer spending will be met by increased orders and production, which contribute to economic growth.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? The U.S. economy had its worst first half since 2011 as businesses trimmed inventorie­s and outlays on equipment and constructi­on projects while government agencies also cut back.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES The U.S. economy had its worst first half since 2011 as businesses trimmed inventorie­s and outlays on equipment and constructi­on projects while government agencies also cut back.

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