First-Quarter GDP Hammered by Temporary Collapse of Business Spending
Real gross domestic product (GDP) contracted at an annual rate of 6.1% in the first quarter of this year, according to the “advance” estimate released by the Commerce Department on April 29. This was a deeper decline than the prevailing consensus estimate — NAHB expected a 5.2% contraction — and was nearly as deep as the 6.3% decline in the final quarter of 2008.
Indeed, this two-quarter contraction represents one of the worst performances in the entire post-war period.
While the overall GDP growth rates were quite similar for the past two quarters, the composition of economic activity was quite different.
A major reduction in consumer spending was a huge negative in the fourth quarter of last year, subtracting 3 percentage points from GDP growth, but this component swung into the black in the first quarter of this year and delivered a solid positive growth contribution of 1.5 percentage points.
A virtual collapse of business spending was the major factor behind the sharp decline in GDP for the first quarter.
Spending on capital equipment and software contracted at a 34% annual rate, nonresidential construction fell at a 44% rate and residential investment plunged at a 38% rate.
These three components, making up private fixed investment in the GDP accounts, knocked 6 percentage points off the economic growth rate, and a major rundown in business inventories chopped off another 2.8 percentage points.
The good news is that we are not likely to see another contraction in business spending similar to the first-quarter collapse and we expect consumer spending to be reasonably solid going forward — buoyed by the fiscal stimulus package enacted earlier this year.
We expect some further decline in GDP during the second quarter, but at a much slower pace than during the past two quarters.
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