The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

U.S. economy grew at 33% rate in Q3

But the recovery is slowing as the pandemic surges

- By Martin Crutsinger

The estimate showed that the nation has regained about two-thirds of the output that was lost early this year.

The U.S. economy grew at a record 33.1% annual rate in the July-September quarter but has yet to fully rebound from its plunge in the first half of the year — and the recovery is slowing as coronaviru­s cases surge and government aid dries up.

The Commerce Department’s estimate Thursday of third-quarter growth showed that the nation has regained only about twothirds of the output that was lost early this year when the eruption of the virus closed businesses, threw tens of millions out of work and caused the deepest recession since the Great Depression.

The economy is now weakening again and facing renewed threats. Confirmed viral cases are surging. Hiring has sagged. Federal stimulus has run out. With no further federal aid in sight this year, Goldman Sachs has slashed its growth forecast for the current fourth quarter to a 3% annual rate from 6%.

Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, noted that the record-high third quarter growth in the nation’s gross domestic product “tells us little, if anything, about momentum heading into” the current quarter.

“The strong GDP performanc­e gives a false impression of the economy’s true health,” Daco wrote in a research note. “Much of the Q3 gain came from carryover effects from fast progress in May-July. ... We anticipate a much slower second phase of the recovery, with output not reclaiming its pre-COVID level until late 2021.”

On Thursday, the government also reported that the number of Americans seeking unemployme­nt benefits fell slightly last week to 751,000. That was the fewest weekly applicatio­ns since March, but the level remains historical­ly high and indicates that the viral pandemic is still forcing many employers to cut jobs.

Though the unemployme­nt rate, at 7.9%, is down significan­tly from 14.7% at the start of the pandemic recession, it is still historical­ly high. And hiring has slowed for three straight months. The economy is still roughly 10.7 million jobs short of recovering all the 22 million jobs that were lost to the pandemic.

The government’s estimate of the third-quarter jump in the gross domestic product — the total output of goods and services in the United States — was the biggest such increase on records dating to 1947. In the January-March quarter this year, GDP had contracted at a 5% annual rate before a record-setting 31.4% annual tumble in the spring.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said he thinks GDP will regain pre-pandemic levels by spring of next year, with GDP expanding 4.2% for 2021. But he warned that the job market might not fully recover until perhaps 2023.

“Many of the jobs in retailing, leisure and airlines have been permanentl­y lost,” he said, “and those folks will have to find different work, and that will take time.”

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