Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Growth in 1Q revised to just 2%

But analysts expect this quarter’s GDP to hit 4% or more

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Martin Crutsinger of The Associated Press and by Katia Dmitrieva and Chris Middleton of Bloomberg News.

WASHINGTON — U.S. economic 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 point 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 April-June 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.

Forecaster­s at Oxford Economics said they expected second- quarter growth to come in at 5 percent with the economy “underpinne­d by strong consumer outlays, robust business investment and positive trade and inventorie­s contributi­ons.” But they cautioned in a research note that rising trade tensions stood out as a risk if businesses grow cautious about how the backlash to the administra­tion’s policies could affect their sales prospects.

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 quar-

ters of 2017. Not a b ly, consumer spending has shown signs of awakening from a winter slumber as higher takehome pay from lower taxes and gradually rising wages in a robust labor market bolster Americans’ financial positions. A separate report Thursday showed that jobless claims rose in the week that ended Saturday for the first time in five weeks. Applicatio­ns increased by 9,000 to 227,000, a level that remains consistent with a tight labor environmen­t. President Donald Trump has often cited this string of strong GDP numbers as evidence that his economic program of deregulati­on, tax cuts and strong enforcemen­t of trade deals is working. However, 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. Analysts believe consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, has accelerate­d in the current quarter. Businesses were more restrained in restocking inventory. That also held back growth in the first quarter. The nation’s trade deficit was a slight drag on growth in the first quarter as export growth slowed. Government spending at the federal and state and local levels increased growth, although not as strongly as in the fourth quarter.

 ?? AP ?? Workers unload a container ship this spring at the Port of Oakland, Calif. The U.S. economy grew in the first quarter at a slower pace than previously estimated.
AP Workers unload a container ship this spring at the Port of Oakland, Calif. The U.S. economy grew in the first quarter at a slower pace than previously estimated.

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