The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

U.S. economy shrank at 5% annual rate

- By Martin Crutsinger

The U.S. economy shrank at an even faster pace than initially estimated in the first three months of this year.

The U.S. economy shrank at an even faster pace than initially estimated in the first three months of this year with economists continuing to expect a far worse outcome in the current April-June quarter.

The Commerce Department reported Thursday that the gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic health, fell at an annual rate of 5% in the first quarter, a bigger decline than the 4.8% drop first estimated a month ago.

It was the biggest quarterly decline in more than a decade, since an 8.4% fall in the fourth quarter of 2008 during the depths of the financial crisis.

The downward revision to first quarter GDP reflected weaker investment by businesses in their inventorie­s which was partially offset by slightly stronger consumer spending.

Economists believe the lockdowns that shut wide swaths of the economy and triggered the layoffs of millions of workers will send the GDP sinking at an annual rate of 40% in the current quarter. That would be the biggest quarterly decline on records that go back to 1947. It would be four times the size of the previous decline set back in 1958.

Many forecaster­s believe growth will rebound sharply in the July-September quarter with the Congressio­nal Budget Office predicting GDP will rise at an annual rate of 21.5%. Still, that gain would not be nearly enough to make up for the economic output that was lost during the first and second quarters.

And many economists worry that the positive GDP performanc­e being forecast for the second half of the year may not come about if the current efforts to reopen the economy do not go well. If the relaxing of stay-at-home rules results in a second wave of the coronaviru­s that could be a serious setback to efforts to get consumers out shopping again in stores and eating in restaurant­s.

Sung Won Sohn, a business and economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los

Angeles, said he was forecastin­g GDP would grow at an annual rate of around 9% in the third quarter and 15% in the fourth quarter of this year if there is no second wave of the virus.

But he said even with those gains, GDP for the whole year will be down 5.3%. Sohn said it will take years to make up the lost GDP, noting that it took over six years for the economy to climb back to where GDP output was before the start of the last years.

The Trump administra­tion, which had been counting on a strong economy to give President Donald Trump a big boost in his re-election battle, has been talking up the coming rebound.

Calling it a “transition to greatness,” the president envisions strong growth in the second half of the year.

“You’re going to see some great numbers in the fourth quarter, and you’re going to end up doing a great year next year,” Trump said recently.

But Sohn and other economists say that the economy will likely not achieve sustained GDP gains until a vaccine has been found and it is widely available, something that could still be a year or more away.

 ??  ??
 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Trucks hauling shipping containers wait to unload at the Port of Oakland in Oakland in this 2019photo. The Commerce Department estimate on Thursday of how the U.S. economy performed in the first quarter of 2020was bleak.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Trucks hauling shipping containers wait to unload at the Port of Oakland in Oakland in this 2019photo. The Commerce Department estimate on Thursday of how the U.S. economy performed in the first quarter of 2020was bleak.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States