The Philippine Star

US economy likely slowed in Q1

-

WASHINGTON (AP) – The US economy likely slowed significan­tly in the first three months of the year, though economists foresee a sharp rebound in the current April-June quarter on the strength of solid job growth, higher consumer confidence and stock-market records.

The government on Friday will release its first of three estimates of growth for the January-March quarter as measured by the gross domestic product. The expectatio­n is that annualized GDP growth will amount to around one percent – less than half the 2.1 percent gain in the previous quarter.

A variety of factors are cited for the expected slowdown, ranging from warmer-than-usual weather that held back utility production to an IRS delay in distributi­ng tax refunds, which possibly dampened consumer spending at the start of 2017.

There is also the problem the government faces this time of year in accurately applying seasonal adjustment­s to its calculatio­ns of economic growth. This occurs, for example, in taking account of housing constructi­on, which typically slows in the January-March quarter depending on how cold the winter is.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis, which prepares the GDP report, has a three-year program aimed at addressing this problem, which has been particular­ly problemati­c in the first quarter. Analysts say that lingering issues in this area may artificial­ly hold down Friday's initial GDP estimate for the first quarter.

At the same time, most forecaster­s predict a sizable snapback in growth. Economists at Macroecono­mic Advisers expect that a lackluster performanc­e of around 0.5 percent annual growth in the first quarter will be followed by a 3.6-percent gain in the second quarter. Other analysts, while not quite that optimistic, foresee annual growth above three percent.

“There are a lot of tailwinds behind consumers going into the spring, including low unemployme­nt, better wage growth, high consumer confidence and record stock prices,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Job growth was strong in January and February before slowing in March, and the unemployme­nt rate is at a nearly decade-low of 4.5 percent. For all of 2017, Zandi forecasts GDP growth of 2.2 percent. That would be up from 1.6 percent in 2016, the slowest expansion in five years.

US President Donald Trump noted the weak 2016 GDP performanc­e in a tweet Wednesday and contended that “trade deficits hurt the economy very badly.”

During the campaign, Trump had pointed to the economy’s slow growth, which has averaged just 2.1 percent annually since the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009. Trump said he could double growth to four percent, though since then. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said the goal is to achieve GDP growth of three percent or better with a combinatio­n of lower taxes, deregulati­on and better enforcemen­t of trade agreements.

On Wednesday, the administra­tion released an outline of its tax-cut plan, proposing to cut rates on both individual­s and businesses and provide what Mnuchin called “massive tax reform.” But economists expressed doubts that the proposal could move growth above three percent.

 ?? AP ?? Job applicatio­ns and informatio­n for the Gap Factory store sit on a table during a job fair at Dolphin Mall in Miami. US employers added just 98,000 jobs last month, the fewest in a year, though the unemployme­nt rate fell to a nearly 10-year low of 4.5...
AP Job applicatio­ns and informatio­n for the Gap Factory store sit on a table during a job fair at Dolphin Mall in Miami. US employers added just 98,000 jobs last month, the fewest in a year, though the unemployme­nt rate fell to a nearly 10-year low of 4.5...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines