Jason Furman
WASHINGTON, DC – Jason Furman, Chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued the following statement today on
the second estimate of GDP for the third quarter of 2015.
Third-quarter economic growth was
revised upward as domestic demand continued to grow at a solid pace. Slowing
foreign demand continues to weigh on overall growth, underscoring the
importance of policies that promote strong and consistent domestic demand
instead of unnecessary austerity and fiscal brinksmanship. That’s why Congress
needs to finish its business this year: passing a complete budget that builds
on last month’s bipartisan budget agreement, increasing investments in surface
transportation infrastructure, and reauthorizing the Export-Import Bank.
FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY'S REPORT
FROM THE BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (BEA)
1. Real Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) rose 2.1 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter, according to
BEA’s second estimate. In the third quarter, GDP grew at a
faster pace than originally estimated, but at a slower pace than the 3.9
percent rate in the second quarter. Third-quarter GDP growth was boosted by
consumer spending (which rose 3.0 percent), business fixed investment (which
rose 2.4 percent) and residential investment (which rose 7.3 percent). However,
inventory investment—one of the most volatile components of economic
output—subtracted 0.6 percentage point from overall growth. Net exports
continued to weigh on output, subtracting 0.2 percentage point amid slowing
global demand. Export growth remains well below the pace observed earlier in
the recovery. Overall, real GDP rose 2.2 percent over the past four quarters.
Real Gross Domestic Output (GDO)—the
average of product-side and income-side measures of output—rose 2.6 percent in
the third quarter, a faster pace than GDP alone. But in the second quarter—including
upward revisions to wages and salaries—GDO is now estimated to have grown 3.0
percent at an annual rate, somewhat slower than GDP. CEA research suggests that GDO is
potentially more accurate than GDP (though not typically stronger or
weaker) over the long term. GDO is estimated to have grown 2.2 percent over the
past four quarters, the same pace as GDP.
(Click on the graphs to increase their size.)
2. Third-quarter real GDP growth was revised up 0.6 percentage point at an annual rate. The upward revision was more than accounted for by a smaller decline in inventory investment than initially estimated, contributing 0.9 percentage point to the GDP growth revision. A modest downward revision to net exports partially offset that shift, reflecting both lower exports and higher imports than previously estimated. Services consumption growth was also revised down slightly. On balance, these revisions tend to move third-quarter growth more in line with longer-term trends, with net exports weighing on growth and inventories having a smaller impact.
3. Changes in inventory
investment, including the third-quarter decline, tell us little about
underlying growth trends. The change in inventory investment is an especially
volatile component of economic output, frequently adding or subtracting a full
percentage point or more from annualized GDP growth in a given quarter. But
over longer time periods, quarterly fluctuations in inventory investment tend
to cancel one another out and have little impact on long-term growth. For
example, although changes in inventory investment subtracted 0.6 percentage
point from growth in the third quarter, they have had a negligible impact on
average growth over the past year.
If the economy grows at its post-crisis
trend of 2.1 percent per year, inventories would need to grow by about $50 billion
per year to keep pace with overall sales. Inventory investment has been above
that level lately, consistent with a rising inventory-sales ratio. Inventory
investment did grow less quickly in the third quarter, but the pace of
investment remains well above the $50 billion pace consistent with a stable
inventory-sales ratio and average GDP growth. Especially when considering the
recent high level of inventory investment, there is further scope for declines
in inventory investment in the coming quarters.
4. Residential investment
growth has picked up over the past year. Over the past
four quarters, residential investment has grown 9.2 percent—the strongest
four-quarter growth rate since the bounce-back from the financial crisis in
2012 and 2013. One encouraging sign for residential investment is household
formation, which includes young adults moving into their own residence.
Formation has grown sharply during the past year, providing scope for
increasing residential investment. Housing demand is expected to continue to
strengthen as household formation rises, credit availability improves, and the
labor market continues to strengthen.
One important structural challenge
facing the supply of housing is the rise in excessive or unnecessary land use
regulations. While land use regulations sometimes serve reasonable and legitimate
purposes, they can also give extra-normal returns to entrenched interests at
the expense of others. I recently discussed these trends—and their links to both
aggregate growth and rising inequality—at the Urban Institute.
5.
Real private domestic final purchases (PDFP)—the sum of consumption and fixed
investment—rose 3.1 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter and is
growing at a faster four-quarter pace than overall GDP. Real
PDFP—which excludes noisier components like net exports, inventories, and
government spending—is generally a more reliable indicator of next-quarter
GDP growth than current GDP. To the extent that systematic patterns emerge
in global growth, however, the information contained in exports may contain an
important signal about the headwinds we face from abroad. Overall, PDFP rose
3.2 percent over the past four quarters, compared with 2.2 percent GDP growth
over the same period. The especially large gap between PDFP growth and GDP
growth is largely attributable to net exports, reflecting slowing growth abroad.
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 single report, and it is informative to consider each report in
the context of other data that are becoming available.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
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