U.S. economy grows 2.0% in third quarter - MarketWatch
The U.S. economy grew 2.0% in the third quarter, fueled by higher
consumer and government spending and more home building, according to a
preliminary government estimate. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch
projected gross domestic product would rise to 1.7% from 1.3% in the
second quarter. Consumer spending, which has the biggest impact on GDP,
rose 2.0% in the July-to-September period, compared to 1.5% in the
second quarter. Real final sales of U.S.-made goods and services
advanced 2.1%, compared to 1.7% in the prior three-month period.
Government spending jumped 3.7%, the biggest increase since mid-2009,
mainly because of higher defense outlays. Also, investment in housing
surged 14.4%. Net imports, which subtract from GDP, fell 0.2%. Exports
dropped a sharper 1.6%. Business investment outside the residential
sector fell 1.3%, the biggest drop since late 2009. Inflation as
measured by the consumer PCE index rose 1.8%, or 1.3% excluding food and
energy. Real disposable income moved up 2.6%, but that was down from a
3.8% increase in the second quarter. The personal savings rate fell to
3.7% from 4.0%.
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