The Commercial Appeal

U.S. lowers growth estimate

Fed might delay tapering

- By Martin Crutsinger and Christophe­r S. Rugaber

WASHINGTON — The U. S economy might not be strong enough for the Federal Reserve to slow its bond purchases this year.

That’s the takeaway from economists after the government cut its estimate Wednesday of growth in the January-March quarter to a 1.8 percent annual rate, sharply below its previous estimate of 2.4 percent. The main reason Consumers spent less than previously thought.

Most economists think growth will remain low as consumers and businesses continue to adjust to federal spending cuts and higher taxes. Growth is expected to reach an annual rate of only about 2 percent in the April-June quarter. Even if the economy improves slightly, it would be hard to meet the Fed’s forecast of 2.3 percent to 2.6 percent growth for 2013.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke rattled investors last week when he said the Fed will likely slow its bond-buying this year if the economy continues to strengthen The bond purchases have helped keep interest rates low. Bernanke added that if the economy weakens, the Fed won’t hesitate to delay its pullback or even step up its bond purchases again.

Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said that if the April-June quarter proves tepid, the Fed will be looking at three straight quarters of subpar growth.

“The Fed won’t taper (its bond purchases) under these conditions,” Lee said. “They need convincing signs of a pickup.”

Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisers, said he suspects the Fed will wait until next year to slow its bond buying. Like most economists Naroff thinks growth will pick up in the OctoberDec­ember quarter and strengthen in 2014.

“If the Fed doesn’t take notice of this revision to growth, they would run the risk of being perceived as largely clueless about the economy,” Naroff said.

Stocks surged Wednesday, a sign that many investors also suspect the economy may prove too weak for the Fed to begin scaling back its stimulus later this year. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 173 points in late-afternoon trading and broader stock indexes also surged.

Most of the revision to last quarter’s growth was

due to a decline in consumer spending to an annual rate of 2.6 percent. That pace is sharply below the 3.4 percent rate previously estimated.

The downgraded estimate of growth was due in large part to weaker spending on services, such as travel, legal services, health care and utilities. Spending on long-lasting manufactur­ed goods, considered a barometer of consumers’ confidence in the economy, was stronger than previously estimated.

Some economists said the lower estimate suggests that an increase in Social Security taxes that took effect this year might be squeezing consumers more than expected.

The tax increase has reduced take-home pay for most Americans. A person earning $50,000 a year has roughly $1,000 less to spend. A high-earning couple has up to $ 4,500 less.

“There was still accelerati­on in the growth of consumer spending — just not as much,” said Paul Edelstein, director of financial services at IHS Global Insight.

The government’s revisions also pointed to less export growth and weaker business investment spending, due mainly to less spending on buildings than previously estimated.

For each quarter, the government issues three estimates of growth as it continues to collect increasing­ly precise data on the nation’s gross domestic product. GDP reflects the economy’s total output of goods and services, from haircuts to aircraft carriers.

In Wednesday’s third and final estimate of firstquart­er growth, for example, the government lowered its figure for consumer spending based on new data from a quarterly Census Bureau survey of services spending.

Edelstein cautioned that the government has trouble calculatin­g spending on services. The estimate could change further next month, when the government will issue the revisions it makes to GDP every five years. These revisions incorporat­e data from the Census Bureau, Internal Revenue Service and other agencies.

“We do not want to overreact to the Q1 data,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U. S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities. He noted that the government has tended to revise up its monthly em- ployment data — a trend, that if it continued, would “suggest on balance that real GDP growth could be understate­d.”

The biggest drag on the economy remains government spending. It fell during the first quarter at an annual rate of 4.8 percent. That shaved 0.9 percentage point from growth.

Economists expect steep federal spending cuts to continue to weigh on growth in the second and third quarters. Edelstein predicts annual growth rates of just 1.5 percent in the current quarter and 1.8 percent in the JulySeptem­ber quarter.

Naroff is more optimis- tic than most: He’s forecastin­g annual growth rates of 2.5 percent in both quarters.

Still, both think the Fed is unlikely to scale back its bond purchases until annual growth moves closer to 3 percent.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said he suspects the Fed will wait until its December meeting to slow its bond purchases, rather than in September as many have been predicting.

Zandi said he thinks the unemployme­nt rate should reach 7 percent by the middle of next year, in line with the Fed’s projection­s. It’s now 7.6 percent.

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