Dayton Daily News

GDP revised to lackluster 2% in Q1

But the current quarter looks to rebound by doubling that rate.

- By Martin Crutsinger

U.S. economic WASHINGTON — growth in the first quarter was revised down to a lackluster 2 percent a sharp decelerati­on and

— the poorest showing in a year. But economists expect a significan­t rebound in the current quarter, forecastin­g a sizzling growth rate of 4 percent or more.

The Commerce Department said Thursday in its final estimate for the January-March quarter that gross domestic product, the country’s total output of goods and services, was even weaker than previously thought. Lower numbers from consumer spending and business inventorie­s helped trim 0.2 percentage points off last month’s estimate that GDP had grown 2.2 percent in the January-March period.

But recent economic reports, including consumer spending, have looked strong and point to far better growth in the AprilJune quarter.

A GDP forecastin­g gauge produced by the Federal Reserve’s Atlanta regional bank is projecting GDP growth of 4.5 percent this quarter, an estimate that is in line with many private forecaster­s. That would be the strongest GDP performanc­e since a 5.2 percent gain in the third quarter of 2014.

The first quarter GDP figure is a notable slowdown from 2.9 percent GDP growth in the fourth quarter and gains above 3 percent in the second and third quarters of 2017.

Private economists believe that the current economic boost from the $1.5 trillion tax cut that Congress approved in December will be short-lived.

Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at SS Economics in Los Angeles, said he is forecastin­g growth this year and next year of close to 3 percent but then a slowdown to less than 1 percent in 2020.

“We are boosting economic activity artificial­ly now so there will be a payback in the future,” Sohn said. Some analysts believe the weakness in 2020, a presidenti­al election year, could be severe enough to raise the prospects of a recession.

The administra­tion is not forecastin­g any slowdown, projecting annual GDP growth will rise to 3 percent and stay there for the rest of the decade.

The first-quarter figure primarily reflected weaker consumer spending, which slowed to growth at a rate of just 0.9 percent, the worst showing since the spring of 2013. However, that slowdown followed a 4 percent surge in spending in the fourth quarter.

Businesses were more restrained in re-stocking inventory. That also held back growth in the first quarter.

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