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42 views • April 26, 2019

US First Quarter GDP

Mark Liu
The American economy picked up pace in the first quarter of 2019, with the the county's gross domestic product (GDP) growing at an annualized rate of 3.2 percent. "This is far above expectations or projections," President Donald Trump commented in an April 26 tweet. "Importantly, inflation VERY LOW. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" “It’s a blowout number,” said Larry Kudlow, Director of Trump’s National Economic Council, in a CNBC interview on April 26. The solid growth relieved the worries of some economists voicing their concerns of an economic downturn after the GDP 2.2 percent growth pace in last quarter of 2018. The worries were fueled by a slew of weak economic indicators, including unusually slow job growth in February as well as the backdrop of last year’s mutual increase of tariffs accompanying the trade negotiations with China. The economy, however, has proven more resilient. “The increase in real GDP in the first quarter reflected positive contributions from personal consumption expenditures (PCE), private inventory investment, exports, state and local government spending, and nonresidential fixed investment,” stated the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) in an April 26 release accompanying the release of the advanced GDP growth estimate. Imports, which lower GDP in the BEA analysis, decreased. The some major downward pressure on the GDP was the decrease in residential investment. “Supply side tax cut, deregulation, opening the energy sector, pro-growth trade reform, that’s improving the supply side, the production, and the investment side of the economy,” Kudlow said. Over the past four quarters, the economy grew on average by 3.25 percent, a number only beaten twice since 2006. Fed Trump has consistently extolled the economic boom under his administration. “Our economy is doing so well, perhaps the best it's ever been in our history,” he said on April 24. Yet he’s urged the Federal Reserve to avoid further rate hikes and tightening of its balance sheet, which he and some economists blamed for the slowdown in late 2018. After four increases in 2018, which prompted a swift rebuke from the president, the Fed hasn’t signaled another rate hike and the GDP numbers are no longer expected to prompt one. Kudlow even suggested a rate cut may be in order, because the Fed’s own indicator of inflation has slipped in late 2018. Jobs Some of the best economic indicators have been coming from the job market, where the unemployment rate stood at 3.8 percent in March with a 12-month average at 3.84, the best since 1970. Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida acknowledged earlier in April the central bank was surprised that the job market hasn’t overheated on labor shortages. Indeed, the unemployment rate excludes people who haven’t sought a job in past four weeks and it was mostly these people who were getting hired in 2018, according to Labor Secretary Alex Acosta. The administration has worked on alleviating labor shortages by promoting apprenticeships and other forms of job skills training. Trump has also repeatedly said he wants the Congress to move the immigration system from emphasizing chain migration and diversity to attracting talent—a merit-based system. Republicans are largely in favor of the change, but Democrats are unlikely to cooperate as it would give Trump another policy victory before the 2020 election. From The Epoch Times
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