Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Growth in GDP 1.9% in quarter

U. S. grew 1.6% for all of 2016

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — The U. S. economy grew at an anemic 1.9 percent rate in the fourth quarter, unchanged from an initial estimate, although consumers spent more than first thought.

The increase in the gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic health, represente­d a significan­t slowdown from 3.5 percent growth recorded in the third quarter, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday.

The fourth- quarter figure was unchanged from the first estimate a month ago, although some of the components were revised. The government found that consumers spent at a faster rate, but spending by state and local government­s and businesses’ equipment purchases were weaker.

Growth for 2016 overall was just 1.6 percent, the poorest showing in five years. Since the recession ended in mid- 2009, annual growth has averaged 2.1 percent, the worst performanc­e for any recovery in the post- World War II period.

President Donald Trump

vowed during the campaign to double economic growth to 4 percent or better. He said his economic program of tax cuts, deregulati­on and increased spending in such areas as the military and infrastruc­ture will produce economic growth rates not seen on a sustained basis in decades.

However, Trump’s Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has cited a lower projection. He has said he believes the Trump program would achieve growth 3 percent or better and that the improvemen­ts would likely

not be felt until 2018, after the Trump program had been enacted.

Even a 3 percent growth goal is viewed by many economists as overly optimistic, given the headwinds the economy faces including an aging workforce and disappoint­ing productivi­ty gains.

At the moment, many economists are forecastin­g growth for this year of between 2 percent and 2.5 percent. Some say growth could hit 3 percent in the second half of the year if elements of Trump’s economic program such as the middle- class tax cuts win approval in Congress by this summer.

Paul Ashworth, chief U. S. economist at Capital Economics,

said that even with the fourth- quarter slowdown, the second half of 2016 was much better than the first half, with encouragin­g signs from business and consumer surveys.

“The marked improvemen­t in the survey evidence recently suggests that growth will continue at a decent pace in the first half of this year,” he said, predicting GDP growth of 2.5 percent in the first quarter.

While the overall GDP figure in the fourth quarter was unchanged, the report Tuesday did show revisions to various components. Consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, was revised

to show solid growth at a 3 percent rate, up from an initial estimate of 2.5 percent growth.

But spending by state and local government­s was revised lower to 1.3 percent growth, just half the initial 2.6 percent estimate. Spending by businesses on equipment such as cellphones was revised down to a 1.9 percent increase instead of the initial 3.1 percent estimate. Housing constructi­on was trimmed to growth at a still- strong rate of 9.6 percent but lower than the initial 10.2 percent gain.

The release Tuesday was the second of three estimates the government releases for GDP performanc­e each quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States