Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GDP increases 3.5% in 3rd quarter

Report on pace of economic growth matches initial estimate

- CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy expanded at a solid 3.5 percent annual rate in the July-September quarter, led by lower but stillstron­g consumer spending and more business investment than previously estimated.

The Commerce Department’s figure for gross domestic product, released Wednesday, was the same as its first estimate last month. GDP is the broadest measure of the nation’s output of goods and services and covers everything from homebuildi­ng to haircuts.

Greater corporate investment offset downward revisions in spending by state and local government­s and consumers.

The third-quarter figure follows a robust expansion of 4.2 percent in the AprilJune quarter. Six months of healthy growth have put the U.S. economy on track to expand in 2018 at its fastest pace in 13 years. Still, economists forecast that growth will slow in the fourth quarter and decelerate further next year.

Borrowing costs are headed higher as the Federal Reserve raises short-term interest rates. That has lifted mortgage rates and weighed on home and auto sales. U.S. trade fights have also raised uncertaint­y for many companies and may cause them to delay investment­s. And the boost to consumer spending from last year’s tax-cut law is likely to fade by next year.

The administra­tion of President Donald Trump

has imposed tariffs on about half the goods that the United States imports from China, and it has threatened to impose tariffs on the rest. That would raise prices on billions of dollars of consumer goods, including smartphone­s, tablets, toys and shoes.

“A trade war remains the biggest downside risk to near-term growth,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC.

Economists at JPMorgan Chase forecast that growth will slow to 2.5 percent in the fourth quarter and 2.2 percent in the first three months of 2019.

Even so, growth is on pace to top 3 percent this year for the first time since 2005. Consumer confidence is near an 18-year high, and the unemployme­nt rate is at a nearly five-decade low of 3.7 percent.

Consumers lifted their spending 3.6 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter, a solid pace but down from the government’s first estimate of 4 percent. State and local government­s increased spending by 2 percent, down from the previous estimate of 3.2 percent.

Those declines were offset by greater business investment: Companies spent more on equipment and did not cut back nearly as much on their spending on buildings as initially estimated. Businesses also spent more to stockpile goods on store shelves and in warehouses.

The inventory building occurred as businesses stepped up their efforts to import more goods before January, when U.S. tariffs on $200 billion of imports from China are expected to jump to 25 percent from 10 percent.

Imports surged 9.2 percent in the third quarter as companies sought to get ahead of the increased tariffs. Trump has also threatened to slap import taxes on foreign cars.

Exports fell 4.4 percent as more U.S. goods are facing retaliator­y tariffs abroad. Exports of U.S. soybeans had jumped in the second quarter in advance of a large tariff increase imposed by China, a key market for U.S. soybeans. Those exports fell back in the third quarter.

The drop in exports and increase in imports in the third quarter meant that internatio­nal trade cut into growth by the most since 1985.

 ?? A U.S. Coast Guard vessel AP ?? patrols nearby as the container ship Horizon Enterprise is unloaded earlier this month at the Port of Oakland, Calif. Imports surged in the third quarter as companies sought to get ahead of the increased tariffs, while exports fell as more U.S. goods face retaliator­y tariffs abroad.
A U.S. Coast Guard vessel AP patrols nearby as the container ship Horizon Enterprise is unloaded earlier this month at the Port of Oakland, Calif. Imports surged in the third quarter as companies sought to get ahead of the increased tariffs, while exports fell as more U.S. goods face retaliator­y tariffs abroad.

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