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U.S. GDP Third Quarter 2011: Economy Grew At 2 Percent Rate

Manufacturing

MARTIN CRUTSINGER   11/22/11 10:03 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy grew more slowly over the summer than the government had earlier estimated because businesses cut back more sharply on restocking of shelves.

The Commerce Department said Tuesday that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 2 percent in the July-September quarter, lower than an initial 2.5 percent estimate made last month. The government also said after-tax incomes fell by the largest amount in two years, reflecting high unemployment and lower pay raises.

The downward revision was largely because weaker data on inventory building came in after the government's first estimate. Many businesses reduced their stockpiles over the summer, probably because they didn't anticipate the strength consumer and business spending.

A decline in inventories is not always a bad sign. Economists believe this could lead to stronger growth in the current quarter, if businesses foresee more demand and restock their shelves.

Economists predict growth will strengthen to around 3 percent in the October-December quarter. Many raised their estimates after seeing encouraging October reports on retail sales and factory output.

"While this report is disappointing, it is a look back in time," said Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. "It is encouraging, to say the least, to see the October data coming in stronger, which is good news for the current quarter."

Still, growth could be slowed if consumers continue to earn less. After-tax, inflation-adjusted incomes fell at a 2.1 percent rate. That's steeper than the 1.7 percent decline initially estimated and the biggest drop since the third quarter of 2009, just as the recession was ending. It also marked the second straight quarterly decline.

Incomes are primarily wages and salaries, but they also include dividend and interest payments and government benefits. While the decline doesn't directly affect economic growth, income fuels consumer spending and that makes up 70 percent of economic activity. So if income continues to decline, consumers will likely spend less and slow growth.

And many Americans could take home even less next year if Congress doesn't extend a Social Security tax cut and emergency unemployment benefits. Both expire at the end of this year.

"For now the U.S. economy looks to be moving in the right direction," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, who predicts growth of more than 3 percent in the fourth quarter.

But the January-March quarter "could be a different story, particularly if the payroll tax cut isn't extended," Ashworth said.

The modest third-quarter growth is not nearly enough to lower the unemployment rate, which has been stuck near 9 percent for more than two years. And economists caution that their brighter outlook hinges on Europe's financial crisis, which could trigger a recession in that region and slow U.S. growth next year.

The government makes three estimates of the gross domestic product, the economy's total output of goods and services, each quarter with the revisions based on more complete economic data.

In the first six months of the year, the economy grew at an annual rate of just 0.9 percent. It was the weakest growth since the recession officially ended, which stocked fears over the summer that the economy could be on the verge of another downturn.

The stronger growth in the July-September quarter helped calm those worries. Still, Americans spent more while earning less, and they dipped into their savings to make up the difference. At the same time, businesses invested more in machines and computers, not workers.

Without more jobs and higher pay raises, consumers are unlikely to be able to sustain those gains.

In October, the economy added a net total of 80,000 jobs. It was the 13th straight month of gains. Still, the additional jobs were fewer than the roughly 125,000 that are needed each month just to keep up with population growth.

There have been signs that the economy and job market are both getting better.

Last week, the government reported further improvement in the number of people seeking unemployment benefits for the first time. The number fell to 388,000, the fewest since April.

Retail sales and factory production both increased in October. While U.S. builders started slightly fewer homes, building permits, a gauge of future construction, surged nearly 11 percent. That gain was led by a 30 percent increase in apartment permits, to their highest level in three years.

Economists at JPMorgan Chase & Co., are now predicting growth of 3 percent this quarter, up from an earlier estimate of 2.5 percent growth.

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WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy grew more slowly over the summer than the government had earlier estimated because businesses cut back more sharply on restocking of shelves. The Commerce Departme...
WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy grew more slowly over the summer than the government had earlier estimated because businesses cut back more sharply on restocking of shelves. The Commerce Departme...
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11:55 AM on 11/23/2011
If we are growing that fast why the hell are we paying people two years of unemployment?
11:06 AM on 11/23/2011
Occupy the White House!!!
09:38 AM on 11/23/2011
Almost every initial announcement of GDP growth is eventually adjusted downward. The initial announcement gets all the attention while the downward adjustment is just a foot note. This is just government propaganda to put a happy face on a declining economy, the same way they took energy and food out of the calculation of inflation.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
08:30 AM on 11/23/2011
The economy is on the upswing! More jobs this month (or quarter)! Wages improving!

How many times have we seen these headlines - not realizing that they are merely "estimates"? Then come the real numbers and we are brought back down to earth and the reality of the economic situation.

The one that really gets me riled up is "Since the end of the recession...." What end?
12:30 AM on 11/23/2011
The GDP can not grow on minimum wages.
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
03:42 AM on 11/23/2011
It is not the wage that is earned, but the purchasing power of the currency in which it is paid, and the ability of said currency to maintain purchasing power.
09:35 AM on 11/23/2011
Wages are important. The U.S. dollar purchasing power has been relatively stable because of cheap imports. Unfortunately, more of working people's income is going to energy and food. Also, the working person's wages have been stagnant for 25 years.
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gra8whit
It's a dog-eat-dog world
09:42 PM on 11/22/2011
The sad thing is, even when you see that U.S. GDP goes up 2%, that figure relates to the top 10%. The rest of us aren't even represented in that figure as this article explains. Whatever positive number the U.S. GDP is, it has no relation to my prosperity.
General Washington
In the future, I return as Geddy Lee
06:00 PM on 11/22/2011
Green shoots!
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dave elliott
correcting the right's ignorance,fruitlessly
05:24 PM on 11/22/2011
when someone makes a smart @zz comment like "go get a job", just be kind, thank them and ask them to "give you a "job". wink, wink.
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cadawa
04:12 PM on 11/22/2011
'Growth will be slowed IF consumers continue to earn less'? The whole point of current economic policy (of, by and for the 1%) is to make sure consumers (those who still have jobs) will earn less.
Working people have been losing ground for decades. Corporations and the ultra wealthy are all sitting on obscene amounts of money. What's wrong with this picture?
They got one thing right. Retailers are not stocking their shelves, driving the economy into an deeper hole and undercutting their own potential profits. How is that a good business plan?
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koos458
We Live In A Kleptocracy
04:10 PM on 11/22/2011
We need to lay off more people, hire children, drug test public aid recipients and throw debtors in prison.
12:09 AM on 11/25/2011
Don't forget mobilizing the military to institute General Patton's counter-insurgency plan.
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no dash american
R we destined to destroy each other?
03:49 PM on 11/22/2011
According to an Economics PhD (did I spell that right?), it takes approximately 17 months from the enactment of an economics policy to yield any results.
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Bart DePalma
Bart DePalma
03:17 PM on 11/22/2011
Anybody notice how Obama administration economic numbers are almost always reduced at a later date?
General Washington
In the future, I return as Geddy Lee
06:01 PM on 11/22/2011
Yes. But that's not exactly limited to the Obama Administration...
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
03:44 AM on 11/23/2011
Indeed.
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ScaningTheWaves
03:16 PM on 11/22/2011
Any one else see the seasonal hirings abroad for about every store....this normal, obama still a failure
03:10 PM on 11/22/2011
More Obama failure.
02:57 PM on 11/22/2011
The Commerce Department missed ther projections by 20% (2% vs 2.5%)....Seriously? Are they that bad? Someone in charge of estimates needs to lose their job. Now, if anyone higher up in the Commerce Department is Obama leaning, then I will expect more of the same....Glowing reports followed by delayed, downward revisions. Which, I would also expect to intensify as we get closer to the election.
06:12 PM on 11/22/2011
Go back and look at Obamas original economic assumptions... he was calling for 6% GDP growth. LOL.