Kuwait Times

US economic growth slows sharply to 0.7% rate in Q4

Consumer spending slows to a 2.2 % rate

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WASHINGTON: US economic growth braked sharply in the fourth quarter as businesses stepped up efforts to reduce an inventory glut and a strong dollar and tepid global demand weighed on exports.

Gross domestic product increased at a 0.7 percent annual rate, the Commerce Department said yesterday, also as lower oil prices continued to undermine investment by energy firms and unseasonab­ly mild weather cut into consumer spending on utilities and apparel. The growth pace was in line with economists’ expectatio­ns and followed a 2 percent rate in the third quarter. The economy grew 2.4 percent in 2015 after a similar expansion in 2014.

But some of the impediment­s to growth - inventorie­s and mild temperatur­es - are temporary and the economy is expected to snap back in the first quarter. Excluding inventorie­s and trade, the economy grew at a 1.6 percent pace. Neverthele­ss, the GDP report could spark a fresh wave of selling on the stock market, which has been roiled by fears of anemic growth in both the United States and China.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday acknowledg­ed that growth “slowed late last year,” but also noted that “labor market conditions improved further.” The Fed, the US central bank, raised interest rates in December for the first time since June 2006. Though the Fed has not ruled out another hike in March, financial markets volatility could see that delayed until June.

SMALL INVENTORY BUILD In the fourth quarter, businesses accumulate­d $68.6 billion worth of inventory. While that is down from $85.5 billion in the third quarter, it was a bit more than economists had expected, suggesting inventorie­s could remain a drag on growth in the first quarter.

The small inventory build subtracted 0.45 percentage point from the first estimate of fourth-quarter GDP growth. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, increased at a 2.2 percent rate. That marked a step-down from the 3.0 percent pace notched in the third quarter.

Unusually mild weather hurt sales of winter apparel in December and undermined demand for heating through the quarter. With gasoline prices around $2 per gallon, a tightening labor market gradually lifting wages and house prices boosting household wealth, economists believe the slowdown in consumer spending will be short-lived.

The dollar, which has gained 11 percent against the currencies of the United States’ trading partners since last January, likely remained a drag on exports, leading to a trade deficit that subtracted 0.47 percentage point from GDP growth in the fourth quarter.— Reuters

 ??  ?? LOS ANGELS: A woman walks past a recently shuttered Walmart store in Chinatown that is part of the closure of 154 store locations across the United States, in Los Angeles yesterday.— AFP
LOS ANGELS: A woman walks past a recently shuttered Walmart store in Chinatown that is part of the closure of 154 store locations across the United States, in Los Angeles yesterday.— AFP

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