The Day

U.S. economic growth rebounded to 2.6 percent annual rate in second quarter

- By JIM PUZZANGHER­A

Washington — The U.S. economy rebounded this spring after a weak winter, expanding at a solid 2.6 percent annual rate as consumers picked up their spending pace, the Commerce Department said Friday.

Total economic output, also known as gross domestic product, for the April-throughJun­e period was in line with analyst expectatio­ns for a bounce-back based in part on pent-up demand.

The economic growth rate was more than double the 1.2 percent pace in the first quarter. That figure was revised down Friday from an earlier estimate of 1.4 percent.

“After the winter blues, the economy has rebounded,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economist at Cal State Channel Islands.

The stronger second-quarter means that the economy expanded 1.9 percent in the first half of the year. That is roughly in line with estimates by the Federal Reserve and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund of 2.1 percent this year, which would be similar to the sluggish annual growth that has plagued the recovery from the Great Recession.

The report, the first of three official government estimates for the quarter, was good news for President Donald Trump as it indicated that the economy’s lackluster first-quarter performanc­e was an anomaly. In a research note, Barclays said the stronger growth showed the first-quarter weakness “was just a blip.”

Trump touted the new data on Friday.

“GDP is up double from what it was in the first quarter,” he said during a speech in New York. “We’re doing well. We’re doing really well.”

But the new data underscore­d the challenge facing Trump to fulfill his pledge of at least 3 percent annual growth, and is likely to increase calls from Republican­s and businesses for big tax cuts to spur the economy.

White House and congressio­nal Republican leaders took a key step toward tax reform Thursday by agreeing to ditch a controvers­ial proposal for a border tax and agreeing on a broad set of principles.

Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Friday that Congress was “on track to deliver transforma­tional tax reform legislatio­n” this year.

But the outlook for large tax cuts remains unclear, particular­ly with the loss of offsetting revenue that would have come from the border-adjustment tax.

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