U.S. Economy: Consumers, Government Propel Growth (Update2)
Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy returned to growth
in the third quarter after a yearlong contraction as government
incentives spurred consumers to spend more on homes and cars.
The world’s largest economy expanded at a 3.5 percent pace
from July through September, figures from the Commerce
Department showed today in Washington. Household purchases
climbed 3.4 percent, the most in two years.
Policy makers will now focus on whether the recovery,
supported by government spending and tax credits, can be
sustained into 2010 and generate jobs. The record $1.4 trillion
budget deficit means President Barack Obama has little room for
maneuver as he tries to keep unemployment from rising above 10
percent, while Federal Reserve policy makers wind down
emergency programs in a bid to prevent a surge in inflation.
“Consumers will feel that the news is getting better, but
not good,” Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors
Inc. in Holland, Pennsylvania, and the top economic forecaster
last year according to a survey by Bloomberg Markets magazine,
said in an interview. Americans “are not going to see
businesses out there hiring a whole lot of people and the
unemployment rate is likely to continue to rise.”
Stocks jumped and Treasuries declined after the report. The
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was up 2.3 percent, the most since
July 23, to 1,066.11 at 4:05 p.m. in New York. The yield on the
10-year Treasury note rose eight basis points to 3.49 percent. A
basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
Jobless Claims
A report from the Labor Department showed 530,000 workers
filed claims for jobless benefits last week, more than
anticipated and signaling the job market is slow to heal even
as growth picks up.
Obama said that while today’s report shows the recession is
abating, the nation has “a long way to go” to fully recover
and bring down unemployment.
“The benchmark I use to measure the strength of our economy
is not just whether our GDP is growing, but whether we’re
creating jobs, whether families are having an easier time paying
their bills, whether our businesses are hiring and doing well,”
he told business leaders on the White House grounds.
The economy was forecast to grow at a 3.2 percent annual
pace, the median estimate of 79 economists surveyed by
Bloomberg News. Projections ranged from gains of 2 percent to
4.8 percent.
The 3.8 percent contraction in the 12 months to June was
the worst performance in seven decades. The four consecutive
decreases mark the longest stretch of declines since quarterly
records began in 1947.
‘Cars-for-Clunkers’
Growth in consumer spending, which accounts for about 70
percent of the economy, “largely reflected” an increase in
purchases of automobiles attributable to the government’s
“cash-for-clunkers” plan, the report said.
Purchases of durable goods, which include autos, jumped 22
percent, the biggest increase since 2001. Excluding sales,
production and inventories of automobiles, the economy grew 1.9
percent last quarter.
While most economists estimate the recession has ended,
the National Bureau of Economic Research, based in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, is responsible for determining when contractions
begin and end. Robert Hall, head of the committee charged with
making the call, said in August it may take more than a year
for the group to reach a conclusion.
Residential construction jumped at a 23 percent annual
rate last quarter, the first gain in almost four years and the
biggest since 1986. The rebound added 0.5 percentage point to
growth.
Homebuilding Jumps
Homebuilding surged as sales climbed, propelled in part by
an $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers. The credit
would be extended and some people who already own residences
could claim a benefit under an agreement reached yesterday by
Senate Democrats.
Fed purchases of mortgage-backed securities have also
helped spur home sales by lowering borrowing costs. The central
bank plans to buy $1.25 trillion of the securities through the
end of March.
Policy makers led by Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke next
meet Nov. 3-4 and are likely to repeat their promise to keep
interest rates very low for an “extended period.”
An improving global economy helped companies from
Amazon.com Inc. to Whirlpool Corp. exceed analysts’ sales
estimates last quarter. Profits at about 85 percent of the
companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index that have released
results beat expectations, according to Bloomberg data. That
marks the highest proportion in records going back to 1993.
Global Recovery
“You should see more expansion in the categories we’re
in, as well as more geographical expansion over time,” Chief
Financial Officer Thomas Szkutak of Amazon.com, the world’s
largest Internet retailer, said on an Oct. 22 conference call.
Total inventories last quarter continued to drop, boosting
expectations that factory production will keep growing. The
drop in stockpiles was smaller than the record decrease in the
second quarter, contributing to growth, today’s report showed.
Lean stockpiles are the main reason the economy will
continue to grow in coming quarters at about the same pace as
in the past three months as companies boost production, said
Naroff. The gain in output will not lead to a quick rebound in
hiring, he said.
In September, the unemployment rate reached a 26-year high
of 9.8 percent, up from 7.6 percent from when Obama took office
in January, figures from the Labor Department show. Economists
project the jobless rate will exceed 10 percent by early 2010.
Since the recession began in December 2007, the U.S. has
lost 7.2 million jobs. Payroll cuts peaked at 741,000 in
January before falling to 263,000 job losses in September.
The economy will likely grow at a 2.4 percent annual rate
from October through December, the median forecast in a survey
earlier this month showed. GDP will also grow 2.4 percent next
year and 2.8 percent in 2011, the survey showed, compared with
an average of 3.4 percent growth over the past six decades.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Timothy R. Homan in Washington at
thoman1@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 29, 2009 16:55 EDT