Jason Furman
WASHINGTON, DC – Jason Furman, Chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued the following statement today on
the third estimate of GDP for the third quarter of 2015.
Third-quarter economic growth
continued at a solid pace as domestic demand grew robustly. Slowing foreign
growth continues to weigh on output in the United States, underscoring the
importance of policies that promote continued strong and consistent domestic
demand. Last week’s omnibus budget and tax agreement will help encourage these
positive domestic trends. But there is more work to do, and the President
remains committed to policies that will boost our long-run growth and wages:
including opening our exports to new markets through high-standards free trade
agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership and raising the minimum wage.
FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY'S REPORT FROM THE BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (BEA)
1. Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose 2.0 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter, according to BEA’s third estimate. GDP grew 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 2.6 percent) and residential investment (which rose 8.2 percent). However, inventory investment—one of the most volatile components of economic output—subtracted 0.7 percentage point from overall growth. Net exports continued to weigh on output, subtracting 0.3 percentage point amid slowing global demand. Export growth remains well below the pace observed earlier in the recovery. Overall, real GDP rose 2.1 percent over the past four quarters.
Real Gross Domestic Output (GDO)—the average of product-side and income-side measures of output—rose 2.3 percent in the third quarter, a faster pace than GDP alone. 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 2.1 percent over the past four quarters, the same pace as GDP.
FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY'S REPORT FROM THE BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (BEA)
1. Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose 2.0 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter, according to BEA’s third estimate. GDP grew 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 2.6 percent) and residential investment (which rose 8.2 percent). However, inventory investment—one of the most volatile components of economic output—subtracted 0.7 percentage point from overall growth. Net exports continued to weigh on output, subtracting 0.3 percentage point amid slowing global demand. Export growth remains well below the pace observed earlier in the recovery. Overall, real GDP rose 2.1 percent over the past four quarters.
Real Gross Domestic Output (GDO)—the average of product-side and income-side measures of output—rose 2.3 percent in the third quarter, a faster pace than GDP alone. 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 2.1 percent over the past four quarters, the same pace as GDP.
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2. Third-quarter real GDP growth
was revised down 0.1 percentage point at an annual rate. The downward
revision was entirely accounted for by a somewhat larger decline in inventory
investment than previously estimated. The change in inventory investment during
the third quarter is now estimated to have subtracted 0.7 percentage point from
annualized GDP growth. Inventory investment is an especially volatile component
of economic output, and growth in Private Domestic Final Purchases (PDFP, see
point 5)—which captures the most persistent and stable components of GDP—was
revised up 0.1 percentage point. Revisions to other components were small and
mostly offsetting.
3. After
decreasing sharply during the financial crisis, residential investment has
risen throughout this recovery—but upside potential for growth remains. Residential
investment rose from a trough of 2.4 percent of GDP in the third quarter of
2010 to 3.4 percent in the third quarter of 2015. But in the years before the
onset of the housing bubble, residential investment was a considerably larger
share of the economy—around 5 percent in 2000. Over the past four quarters,
residential investment has grown 9.4 percent—the strongest four-quarter growth
rate since the bounce-back from the financial crisis in 2012 and 2013.
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.
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.
4. Prices
of health care services have risen just 0.7 percent over the past four
quarters, extending the recent period of exceptionally slow health care price
inflation, while expanding coverage has driven faster growth in aggregate
utilization of health care services. Prior to 2015, an increase in health
care services prices as low as the 0.7 percent increase over the most recent
four quarters had not been seen since 1961. Continuing an unusual pattern in
recent years, the increase in the prices of health care services over the last
year was only slightly above the overall increase in consumer prices. From
1960:Q1 through 2010:Q1, the inflation rate for health care services exceeded
the inflation rate for all consumer goods and services by an average of 2.1
percentage points.
The continued slow increase in health care prices is a major reason that overall per-enrollee health care spending—the metric of health costs most relevant to individuals and families—continues to grow exceptionally slowly in both the public and private sectors. However, aggregate health care spending—reflecting aggregate utilization of health care services—has grown at an elevated rate in recent quarters. The 4.6 percent increase over the most recent four quarters remains well above the 1.9 percent average rate from 2010 to 2013. This recent acceleration appears to largely reflect increased access to care by the millions of people who have gained health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act since the end of 2013. Upward pressure on aggregate utilization growth from expanding coverage is neither a surprise nor a cause for concern and will be temporary, lasting only until coverage stabilizes at its new, higher level in the coming years.
The continued slow increase in health care prices is a major reason that overall per-enrollee health care spending—the metric of health costs most relevant to individuals and families—continues to grow exceptionally slowly in both the public and private sectors. However, aggregate health care spending—reflecting aggregate utilization of health care services—has grown at an elevated rate in recent quarters. The 4.6 percent increase over the most recent four quarters remains well above the 1.9 percent average rate from 2010 to 2013. This recent acceleration appears to largely reflect increased access to care by the millions of people who have gained health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act since the end of 2013. Upward pressure on aggregate utilization growth from expanding coverage is neither a surprise nor a cause for concern and will be temporary, lasting only until coverage stabilizes at its new, higher level in the coming years.
5. Real private domestic final
purchases (PDFP)—the sum of consumption and fixed investment—rose 3.2 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. Overall, PDFP rose 3.2 percent over the past four quarters, compared
with 2.1 percent GDP growth over the same period. The especially large gap
between PDFP growth and GDP growth is mostly attributable to net exports,
reflecting slowing growth abroad. To the extent that systematic patterns emerge
in global growth, the information contained in exports may contain an important
signal about the headwinds we face from 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
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