The US economy shrank at an annual rate of 0.5 percent in the third quarter
this year, the worst showing since the third quarter of 2001, the Commerce
Department said yesterday citing revised data.
The decline in gross domestic product (GDP) was unchanged from an estimate
made a month ago for the July-September period and followed a growth pace of 2.8
percent in the second quarter.
The decrease in real GDP primarily reflected negative contributions from
personal consumption expenditures, residential fixed investment, and equipment
and software that were partly offset by positive contributions from federal
government spending, private inventory investment, exports, nonresidential
structures, and state and local government spending, the department said while
releasing a report on the data.
"Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased," it
added.
In the third quarter, consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of
overall economic activity, dropped at an annual rate of 3.8 percent, in contrast
to a 1.2-percent growth rate in the previous quarter.
Spending on housing projects plunged 16.0 percent, steeper than the
13.3-percent drop in the second quarter, marking the 11th consecutive quarterly
decline.
Spending by businesses on equipment and software declined 7.5 percent, worse
than the 5.0-percent drop in the previous quarter.
Exports of goods and services rose by 3.0 percent after having jumped 12.3
percent in the second quarter, while imports of goods and services decreased 3.5
percent after having declined 7.3 percent in the second quarter.
Federal government spending in the third quarter, however, rose at a rate of
5.8 percent, stronger than the 3.9-percent growth pace in the previous quarter.
"Core" prices, which exclude volatile energy and food prices and are an
inflation gauge closely watched by the Federal Reserve, rose at a rate of 2.4
percent in the third quarter, up from a 2.2-percent growth pace in the previous
quarter.
GDP measures the value of all goods and services produced within a country.
Many analysts fear the third-quarter contraction in GDP will be followed by much
larger decreases this quarter and the next.