Oroville Mercury-Register

US slightly upgrades GDP estimate for last quarter to 6.6 percent

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON >> The U.S. economy grew at a robust 6.6% annual rate last quarter, slightly faster than previously estimated, the government said Thursday in a report that pointed to a sustained consumer-led rebound from the pandemic recession. But worries are growing that the delta variant of the coronaviru­s is beginning to cause a slowdown.

The report from the Commerce Department estimated that the nation’s gross domestic product — its total output of goods and services — accelerate­d slightly in the April-June quarter from the 6.5% it had initially reported last month. The economy’s expansion last quarter followed a solid 6.3% annual growth rate in the JanuaryMar­ch period.

In recent weeks, many economists have been downgradin­g their estimates of GDP growth for this quarter, and for 2021 as a whole, as the now-dominant delta variant has sent confirmed COVID-19 cases rising throughout the country.

New reported cases are now topping 150,000 a day, the highest level since late

January. As a consequenc­e, real-time tracking of consumer activities, notably for airline travel and restaurant dining, has weakened in recent weeks.

The government’s upgraded estimate for growth in the April-June quarter fell somewhat shy of expectatio­ns. Some economists had predicted a 7% annual rate or more. They based that view on a belief that consumer spending had accelerate­d even faster than the sizzling 11.8% rate first reported. Thursday’s revised estimate for consumer spending, which drives about 70% of economic activity, was upgraded by 0.1 percentage point to 11.9%.

The slight rise in the government’s estimate for April-June growth reflected, in part, stronger business investment, which grew at a solid 9.3% rate, and export sales, which were up at a 6.6% rate after falling in the first quarter. Offsetting that strength was a bigger drag from cutbacks in businesses inventory restocking and weaker home building, which fell at an 11.5% annual rate. This sector has been hurt by surging prices for materials and a shortage of constructi­on workers.

 ?? SHAFKAT ANOWAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Shoppers wait in line outside a Chicago downtown retail store as others pass by Wednesday.
SHAFKAT ANOWAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Shoppers wait in line outside a Chicago downtown retail store as others pass by Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States