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Economic growth in first quarter slows to its weakest pace in 4 years
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 27 - 04 - 2007


U.S. economic growth slowed to a near
crawl of 1.3 percent in the first three months of 2007, the
worst performance in four years. The main culprit: the
housing slump.
The fresh reading on gross domestic product, released by
the Commerce Department on Friday, was even weaker than the
2.5 percent growth rate logged in the final three months of
last year. The new figures underscored just how much
momentum the economy has been losing as it copes with the
strain of the troubled housing market, which has made some
businesses more cautious in their spending, according to AP.
The first-quarter GDP figure was the weakest since a 1.2
percent pace registered in the opening quarter of 2003. GDP
measures the value of all goods and services produced
within the United States and is considered the best
barometer of the country's economic fitness.
«This was tepid activity in the first quarter. The
economy was taking a breather,» said Ken Mayland,
president of ClearView Economics.
The performance was even weaker than what economists
expected; they had forecast a growth rate of 1.8 percent.
Still, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Bush
administration officials and other economists don't expect
the economy to fall into a recession this year. Former Fed
chief Alan Greenspan has put the odds at one in three,
however.
«We knew that the housing market would go through an
adjustment. The positive news here is that our economy has
been able to grow in spite of that very sharp reduction,»
Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, said in an interview
with The Associated Press,
Even though the economy slowed in the first quarter,
inflation picked up _ a development that will complicate
the Fed's work.
An inflation gauge tied to the GDP report and closely
watched by the Fed showed that core prices _ excluding food
and energy _ rose at a rate of 2.2 percent in the first
quarter, up from a 1.8 percent pace in the fourth quarter.
Another measure tracking all prices jumped by 3.4 percent
in the first quarter, compared to a 1.0 percent decline, on
an annualized basis in the fourth quarter.
Federal Reserve policymakers say the biggest danger to the
economy is if inflation doesn't recede as they currently
predict.
The Federal Reserve hasn't moved a key interest rate since
August. Before that it had steadily lifted rates to ward
off inflation. Many economists predict the Fed will
continue to leave rates alone when it meets next month. The
Fed's goal is to slow the economy sufficiently to key
inflation in check, but not so much as to provoke a
recession.
In other economic news, employers' costs to hire and
retain workers grew by 0.8 percent in the first quarter,
down slightly from a 0.9 percent increase in the fourth
quarter, the Labor Department reported.
Wages and salaries went up 1.1 percent, a figure that
hasn't been higher since 2001. Benefit costs, however,
edged up 0.1 percent, the slowest since the first quarter
of 1999. The Fed keeps close tabs on labor costs for clues
about inflation.
The reports come as President George W. Bush continues to
cope with mediocre ratings from the public on his economic
stewardship, according to AP-Ipsos polls. Democrats, who
have accused Bush of not doing enough to close the widening
gap between high- and low-paid workers, are advocating a
boost to the federal minimum wage and policies to help
unions.
The biggest factor behind the first-quarter's slowdown was
the crumbling housing market. Investment in home building
was cut by 17 percent, on an annualized basis. That came
after such investment was slashed at an even deeper 19.8
percent pace in the fourth quarter.
Weak investment by businesses in inventories also held
back first-quarter GDP. However, business investment in
equipment and software edged up at a 1.9 percent pace in
the first quarter. That was lackluster but nevertheless
marked an improvment from the 4.8 percent cut in the fourth
quarter.
The country's bloated trade deficit also weighed on first
quarter economic growth, shaving 0.52 percentage point off
GDP.
Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, called the
trade deficit and sick housing market «body blows» to the
economy, which «must be countered by sound economic policy
from the Bush administration.»
Another factor holding back GDP in the first quarter was a
6.6 percent drop, on an annualized basis, in federal
defense spending. That was the biggest cut since the final
quarter of 2005.
Consumers whose shopping is indispensable to a booming
economy boosted their spending at a 3.8 percent pace in the
first quarter. That was a solid showing although it was
slightly weaker than the 4.2 percent growth rate logged in
the fourth quarter.
A key reason why consumers have remained resilient, even
in the face of the painful housing slump, is that the jobs
markets has managed to stay in good shape. The nation's
unemployment rate dropped in March to 4.4 percent, matching
a five-year low.
-- SPA


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