WASHINGTON,
DC – Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued
the following statement today on the second estimate of GDP for the
second quarter of 2015.
Real
GDP growth in the second quarter was revised markedly upward, as
consumers spent more and businesses invested more than previously
estimated. The economy grew at a much faster pace in the second quarter
than in the first, with strong personal consumption leading the rebound.
At this time in the global economy, it is essential that we continue to
do everything we can to maintain America’s domestic economic
momentum—including avoiding a return to fiscal brinksmanship or
unnecessary austerity by passing an on-time budget that reverses the
sequester, increasing investments in infrastructure as part of a
long-term transportation reauthorization, and other steps to foster
long-term growth.
FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY’S REPORT FROM THE BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (BEA)
1. Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose 3.7 percent at an annual rate in
the second quarter according to the BEA’s latest estimate, well above
the first quarter’s 0.6 percent pace and the BEA’s initial
second-quarter estimate of 2.3 percent growth. In
the second quarter, the increase in GDP growth was led by a faster pace
of personal consumption growth than in the first quarter and a shift
from negative to positive net export growth. Structures investment,
which declined sharply in the first quarter and was previously thought
to have declined in the second, is now estimated to have grown. Overall,
real GDP has now risen 2.7 percent over the past four quarters. Real
Gross Domestic Output (GDO)—an
alternative gauge of economic output that is potentially more accurate
(though not predictably stronger or weaker) over the long term,
which BEA calls “the average of GDP and Gross Domestic Income
(GDI)”—rose 2.1 percent in the second quarter and has risen 2.5 percent
over the past four quarters, indicating a similar trend for growth as
GDP albeit with a different quarterly pattern.
(Click on graphs to increase their size.)
2. The 1.4 percentage point upward revision to real second-quarter GDP was spread across many components of economic output. Business
fixed investment accounted for a little more than a third of the
overall revision, as investment in structures, equipment, and
intellectual property were all higher than previously estimated. Indeed,
business investment—weighed down by reduced oil-related investment in
the wake of oil price declines and previously thought to have fallen—is
now estimated to have grown in the second quarter. State and local
government purchases also accounted for 0.3 percentage point of the
overall revision, as did inventory investment. Personal consumption, net
exports, and federal government spending also each saw small positive
upward revisions. Notably, this was an especially broad-based revision
without any downward revisions in major components of GDP.
3. Initial estimates of Gross Domestic Output (GDO) growth over the long term tend to predict subsequent revisions to GDP growth. GDO
is the Council of Economic Advisers’ term for the average of GDP and
Gross Domestic Income (GDI)—two measures that should conceptually be
identical but differ due to measurement error. While not systematically
stronger or weaker than GDP over time, GDO
can provide a more accurate picture of economic output, in part because
independent errors to GDP and GDI tend partially to cancel out when the
two are added.
Relatedly, early GDO estimates appear to provide information about the
extent to which GDP will eventually be revised. When GDO is estimated to
grow faster than GDP, GDP tends to be revised up, and vice versa. The
chart below shows the association between revisions to GDP growth
incorporating all annual revisions to date (the “years later” measure)
and the gap between initially estimated GDP and GDO. Of course—as with
virtually all economic data when there are noisy statistics—it is
important to focus on longer-term trends. Our analysis here is based on
four-quarter growth rates of GDP and GDO, and we caution against
focusing too much on the quarterly gap.
4. A
slowdown in business investment during the recovery has been led by
oil-driven declines in structures and equipment spending, while
intellectual property investment—including research and development—has
accelerated throughout the recovery. Structures
and equipment investment grew markedly more slowly over the first half
of 2015 than they had earlier in the recovery, largely reflecting
reduced oil investment in the low-price environment. These components
have restrained overall business investment growth. But at the same
time, investment in intellectual property, which chiefly comprises
research and development and software, has grown progressively faster.
In fact, research and development investment has grown 7.9 percent over
the past four quarters, the fastest pace since 2007 and three times
faster than overall economic growth. The acceleration in overall IP
spending has been relatively steady throughout the recovery, while
equipment and structures investment have been volatile. Many economists
view research and development as an important source of productivity
growth.
5. Real
private domestic final purchases (PDFP)—the sum of consumption and
fixed investment—rose 3.3 percent at an annual rate in the second
quarter, and is growing at a faster year-over-year pace than overall
GDP. Real PDFP—which excludes the often noisy components like net exports, inventories, and government spending—is generally a more reliable indicator of next-quarter GDP growth than current GDP.
While GDO aims to measure output growth more accurately in a given
quarter by reducing measurement error, PDFP aims to measure signals of
future economic growth by eliminating some of the noisy components in
GDP. Over the past four quarters, PDFP grew by 3.4 percent, a faster
rate than overall GDP growth. In analogy to the relationship between GDP
and PDFP, the sum of wages and corporate profits is an especially
important component of Gross Domestic Income (GDI), the income-side
output measure that is combined with GDP to produce GDO. In fact, while PDFP
tends to predict next-quarter GDP especially well, wages and profits
tend to predict GDP over the next four quarters especially well—despite
being more volatile than PDFP. Real wages and profits have grown 2.6
percent over the past four quarters, roughly in line with current trends
in GDP and GDO.
As
the Administration stresses every quarter, GDP figures can be volatile
and are subject to substantial revision. Therefore, it is important not
to read too much into any one single report, and it is informative to
consider each report in the context of other data that are becoming
available.
Source: The White House Press Office
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