Coronavirus savages US economy in Q1 — and worst is still to come
washington — The US economy contracted in the first quarter at its sharpest pace since the Great Recession as stringent measures to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus almost shut down the country, ending the longest expansion in the nation’s history.
The decline in GDP reflected a plunge in economic activity in the last two weeks of March, which saw millions of Americans seeking unemployment benefits. The Commerce Department’s snapshot of firstquarter GDP on Wednesday reinforced analysts’ predictions that the economy was already in a deep recession.
“The economy will continue to fall until the country opens back up,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG in New York. “If the economy fell this hard in the first quarter, with less than a month of pandemic lockdown for most states, don’t ask how far it will crater in the second quarter.”
GDP declined at a 4.8 per cent annualised rate last quarter, weighed down by sharp decreases in consumer spending and a drawdown of inventory at businesses. That was the steepest pace of contraction in GDP since the fourth quarter of 2008. A deepening downturn in investment by businesses was another major factor in the slump last quarter, helping to overshadow positive news from a shrinking import bill, the housing market and more spending by the government.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast GDP falling at a 4 per cent rate last quarter, though estimates were as low as a 15 per cent pace. The economy grew at a 2.1 per cent rate in the fourth quarter. The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis said that it could not quantify the full effects of the pandemic, but that the virus had partly contributed to the decline in GDP in the first quarter.
Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, tumbled at a 7.6 per cent rate in the first quarter, the sharpest decline since the fourth quarter of 1980, as demand for both goods and services plummeted. Consumer spending grew at a 1.8 per cent pace in the October-December period. The other components of GDP were equally weak last quarter.
While declining imports helped narrow the trade deficit and contributed 1.30 percentage points to GDP last quarter, that meant no inventory was accumulated. Inventories decreased at a $16.3 billion rate in the first quarter after increasing at a $13.1 billion pace in the fourth quarter. —
-4.8 %
US GDP rate posted in the first quarter