The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. economy soars to 4.1% growth rate

Trump calls the strongest quarterly figure since 2014 ‘amazing.’

- By Martin Crutsinger

Economists say the boost was due to temporary factors and predict growth won’t last in the months ahead.

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy accelerate­d last quarter at an annual rate of 4.1 percent, the government estimated Friday, as consumers spent tax-cut money, businesses stepped up investment and exporters rushed to ship their goods ahead of retaliator­y tariffs.

President Donald Trump said he was thrilled with what he called an “amazing” growth rate — the strongest quarterly figure since 2014 — and said it wasn’t “a onetime shot.” But most economists took issue with that forecast, saying the pace of growth in the April June quarter won’t likely last in the months ahead.

The Commerce Department said the gross domestic product — the total output of goods and services produced in the United States — posted its best showing since a 4.9 percent annual increase in the third quarter of 2014.

Trump, who has repeatedly attacked the Obama administra­tion’s economic record, had pledged during the 2016 presidenti­al race to double annual economic growth to 4 percent or more. At a White House appearance Friday with his top economic advisers and Vice President Mike Pence, the president said that “we’ve accomplish­ed an economic turnaround of historic proportion­s.”

He predicted that the economy would fare “extraordin­arily well” in the current July-September quarter and that growth for 2018 as a whole would be the best in 13 years.

But forecaster­s cautioned that the April-June pace was due mainly, though not entirely, to temporary factors. Most analysts are forecastin­g that growth this year could reach 3 percent, which would be the best since a 3.5 percent gain in 2005. But many think the annual 4.1 percent growth rate last quarter is likely the high point for any one quarter. Many think annual growth in the second half of this year will be 2.5 percent to 3 percent.

“We believe quarter two will represent a growth peak as the boost from tax cuts fades, global growth moderates, inflation rises, the Fed tightens monetary policy and trade protection­ism looms over the economy,” said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

The latest GDP figure was nearly double the 2.2 percent growth rate in the first quarter, which was revised up from a previous estimate of 2 percent annual growth.

Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity, reached a 4 percent annual growth rate after a lackluster 0.5 percent rate in the first quarter. Consumers began spending their higher take-home pay on autos and other big-ticket items,

spurred by the $1.5 trillion tax cut Trump pushed through Congress in December.

Another key factor that bolstered growth was a rush by exporters of soybeans and other products to move their shipments to other countries before retaliator­y tariffs in response to Trump’s tariffs on imports took effect.

Exports surged at a 9.3 percent annual rate in the second quarter, while imports grew at a scant 0.5 percent rate.

Trump called the narrowing of the trade deficit “one of the biggest wins in the report.”

The narrowing trade deficit added a full percentage point to growth last quarter, though economists have expressed concern that a full-blown trade war between the United States and China will hurt growth in both countries.

Business investment grew at a solid 7.3 percent annual rate.

Government spending also posted a solid gain, rising at a 2.1 percent annual rate.

The result was boosted by a budget deal at the start of the year that added billions to defense and domestic spending. But housing, which has struggled this year, shrank at a 1.1 percent annual rate after a 3.4 percent annual decline in the first quarter.

“The second quarter was a strong quarter, but it was juiced up by the tax cuts and higher government spending,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist Moody’s Analytics.

Zandi forecast that growth for 2018 will reach 3 percent, which would be the best rate since before the Great Recession.

In 2019, he expects solid 2.6 percent growth. But in 2020 — a presidenti­al election year — Zandi is forecastin­g growth of just 0.9 percent, a pace so slow it will raise the threat of a recession.

“We will come pretty close to stalling out in 2020 because the growth we are seeing now is not sustainabl­e,” Zandi said.

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