U.S. first-quarter GDP cut to 1.8% from 2.4% - MarketWatch
Wowsers.
The U.S. economy grew a lot slower in the first quarter than previously believed, mainly because of less consumer spending on services and weaker business investment.
The U.S. economy grew a lot slower in the first quarter than previously
believed, mainly because of less consumer spending on services and
weaker business investment. Gross domestic product rose by 1.8% in the
January-to-March period, down from a prior estimate of 2.4%, the
Commerce Department said Wednesday in the last of three regular updates.
Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected growth to remain
unchanged at 2.4%. The increase in consumer spending - the main engine
of the U.S. economy - was lowered to 2.6% from 3.4%. Americans did not
spend as much on services such as health care and legal advice, the
government said. Outlays for services were reduced to a 1.7% increase
from 3.1%. Investment in business structures such as office buildings
and plants also fell a steeper 8.3% instead of 3.5% as previously
reported. Meanwhile, exports were revised to show a 1.1% decline and not
a 0.8% gain, while imports actually fell 0.4% instead of rising 1.9%.
The biggest bright spot: residential investment jumped 14% in the first
quarter, up from a prior read of 12.1%. That's further evidence of a
housing market gaining momentum. Most other figures in the GDP report
were little changed
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