4th Qtr. GDP Surprise: Too Good To Be True?

America’s economy galloped ahead in the final quarter of 2009, expanding at a better-than-expected 5.7% rate, according to the first estimate from the Commerce Department. (I hasten to add that it was not a surprise to CC founding contributor Justin Fox who’s been alerting readers to the strong likelihood of an eye-popping 4th quarter performance.) The robust rate, even if it holds up under revisions, won’t be enough to put full-year 2009 in the plus column. But it’s welcome news nonetheless.

 Here is a smart (and sobering) take on today’s numbers from Ian Shephardson at High Frequency Economics:

“While the GDP number was close to our expectation we are mildly pleasantly surprised by the details. Inventories accounted for 3.4 percentage points of GDP growth, a bit less than the 4pp we expected. That meant final sales rose 2.2%, rather than the 1.5% we forecast. The key upside surprise is in capital spending on equipment and software, up 13.3%. We can’t see where this comes from and think a downward revision is likely but for now it is
the number. Net trade was better than we expected, adding 0.5pp to growth; consumption was as expected, up 2.0%, but we are surprised govt spending fell 0.2%. That’s not what the economy needs now. Bulls will gloat but 2%-ish Q1 GDP will be a reality check.”

Related Topics: Economy & Policy
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  • waltwriston

    GDP is IMO the least reliable of all indictors. I find it strange that they raised the debt ceiling, and then release what I think is a false GDP report to fool are foreign creditors into thinking the US a not only growing but faster than usual.

    It was rather funny that the news said that in order to secure the credit worthiness of the US we had to raise the debt ceiling, and at the same time publish a inflated 4th quarter report, Now that’s what it really takes to ensure credit worthiness.

  • tanboontee

    What exact percentage of the quarterly growth was due to the momentary shopping spree in the pre-festive season?

    There is nothing to be euphoric about.

  • tanboontee

    Perhaps there is a need now to redefine the meaning and content of GDP.

    Moreover, operational percentages must be clearly stated and put to better representation for readers’ understanding, instead of the often rampantly blur and loose usage.

    Any suggestion?

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