US growth revised upward

US growth revised upward

A customer buys lunch at a bakery in North Andover, Massachusetts. US consumer spending in the first quarter was slightly better than originally estimated, pushing up overall economic growth to 1.2%. (AP Photo)
A customer buys lunch at a bakery in North Andover, Massachusetts. US consumer spending in the first quarter was slightly better than originally estimated, pushing up overall economic growth to 1.2%. (AP Photo)

WASHINGTON: The US economy started 2017 with a whimper, but it wasn't quite as weak as first thought. The government on Friday revised up its January-March growth reading to a rate of 1.2% -- better than an earlier estimate of 0.7% but well below President Donald Trump's ambitious growth targets.

Growth in the gross domestic product is down from a 2.1% annual growth rate in the fourth quarter and marks the weakest result in a year, the Commerce Department reported.

The upgrade to 1.2% reflected new-found strength in consumer spending, business investment and state and local government spending.

Many economists believe growth in the current April-June quarter will rebound sharply to between 3% and 3.5%, helped by stronger consumer spending that reflects solid employment gains and an unemployment rate that has fallen to a decade low of 4.4%. Moreover, part of the first quarter weakness reflected various temporary factors such as unusually warm winter weather.

However, after a spring surge, analysts believe growth will fall back to a level of 2% to 2.5% in the second half -- the same modest pace that has been in effect for the almost eight years of this economic recovery, making it the slowest expansion in the post-World War II period.

During the campaign, Trump attacked the economy's weak growth and blamed it on failed economic policies of the Obama administration. He vowed that his economic programme of tax cuts, deregulation and tougher enforcement of trade agreements would double growth to 4% or better.

Trump released his first budget on Tuesday, a $4.1-trillion spending plan that counts on faster growth to trim deficits by $2 trillion over the next decade. Many private economists believe the budget is far too optimistic about how fast the US economy can grow, given an ageing workforce and stubbornly low productivity gains.

The economy grew 1.6% for all of last year, the poorest showing in five years. With Trump's legislative programme running into obstacles in Congress, forecasters have been trimming their growth numbers for the second half of this year and pushing any gains from Trump's tax cuts into 2018.

The revision for the first quarter reflected a boost in consumer spending to an annual rate of 0.6%, still the slowest in seven years but up from an initial estimate of 0.3%. Analysts believe spending should expand in the current quarter, helped in part by the tendency of consumers to spend more during periods of rising stock prices and home values because their net worth is increasing.

The latest result was also driven by lower declines in spending by state and local governments than initially thought and stronger investment by businesses in structures and intellectual property.

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