Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fourth-quarter GDP revised up

Economists forecast 6% growth this year

- Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON – The economy grew at a 4.1% pace in the final three months of 2020, slightly faster than first estimated, ending a year in which the overall economy, ravaged by a global pandemic, shrank more than in any year in the past seven decades.

The influx of new government stimulus efforts and accelerate­d vaccine distributi­on could lift growth in the current quarter, ending in March, to 5% or even higher, economists believe.

The 4.1% gain in the gross domestic product – the broadest measure of economic health – is a slight upward revision from 4% growth in the first estimate released a month ago, the Commerce Department reported Thursday.

The revision does alter the nation’s annual GDP, which shrank 3.5%, the largest decline since 1946 when the U.S. demobilize­d after World War II.

As bad as 2020 was, it’s set the nation up for what economists believe will be a very strong rebound. Many project a growth rate of 5% or more in the current quarter or more, with 9% growth the headline in some forecasts.

For all of 2021, economists are forecastin­g the GDP could grow by 6%. That would be the fastest annual GDP growth since the economy expanded 7.2% in 1984.

Fueling optimism about an economic comeback is a sharp decline in new COVID-19 infections, and recent surging sales in the beleaguere­d retail sector.

“You have massive government stimulus, low interest rates from the

Fed and the vaccine supply is growing,” said Sung Won Sohn, finance and economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. “The economy is beginning to fire on all cylinders.”

The upward revision to the nation’s quarterly GDP reflected stronger housing constructi­on, a bigger increase in business inventorie­s, and a smaller decline in state and government spending than first estimated a month ago.

These gains offset a slightly slower increase in consumer spending, which accounts for two thirds of economic activity. The new report showed consumer spending growing at a 2.4% rate, slightly lower than the 2.5% gain initially estimated.

Housing constructi­on, the star performer for the economy last year, grew at a 35.8% rate in the fourth quarter following a 63% surge in the third quarter.

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