First-quarter U.S. GDP barely rises, up 0.1%
Growth in the U.S. economy slowed to a miserly 0.1% annual pace in the
first quarter from 2.6% at the end of 2013, a bout of weakness spurred
by one of the worst winters in years. Consumer spending, the main driver
of the U.S. economy, actually rose 3% after a strong 3.3% gain in the
fourth quarter, but the increase was driven mostly by higher outlays on
utilities and health care, according to preliminary data released by the
Commerce Department
on Wednesday. Yet business investment on equipment, another key
economic cog, fell 5.5% to mark the biggest drop in almost five years.
Investment in home construction also fell for the second quarter in a
row, down an annualized 5.7%. The estimated increase in inventories was
$87.4 billion, smaller than the record $100 billion-plus spikes in the
third and fourth quarters of 2013. Exports (-7.6%) fell faster than
imports (-1.4%) to push the trade deficit higher and also act as a drag
on growth. Government spending rose at the federal level but declined by
0.5% overall because of cutbacks by states and localities. Excluding
inventories, final sales of American-made goods and services softened to
a 0.7% pace from 2.7% in the fourth quarter. Inflation as measured by
the PCE index rose at a 1.4% annual pace, or by 1.3% excluding food and
energy. Over the past year the PCE index has risen just 1.1%.
Inflation-adjusted disposable income, or the money left over after taxes,
climbed 1.9%, mainly because of higher government benefits such as
Medicaid tied to the introduction of the new health-care law.
The Federal Reserve has failed! words escape me, and as a New Englander this was NOT the worst winter in years...total BS
It snows in Canada as well and their Economy is out pacing ours!..
No comments:
Post a Comment