3.3% GDP !

anatta

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The U.S. economy’s growth rate last quarter was revised upward to the fastest in three years on stronger investment from businesses and government agencies than previously estimated, Commerce Department data showed Wednesday.
Highlights of Third-Quarter GDP (Second Estimate)

Gross domestic product grew at a 3.3% annualized rate (est. 3.2%), revised from 3%; fastest since 3Q 2014
Consumer spending, biggest part of the economy, grew 2.3% (est. 2.5%); revised from 2.4%; down from 3.3% in 2Q
Business-equipment spending rose at a 10.4% pace, a three-year high, revised from 8.6%; reflects transportation gear
Corporate pretax earnings rose 5.4% y/y, following a 6.3% y/y advance

Key Takeaways

The latest results for GDP, the value of all goods and services produced, show the economy withstood major hurricanes to reach a more solid footing as it entered the final stretch of the year, thanks to stronger business spending that’s helping cushion a softer pace of consumption.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Wednesday, just before the GDP report, that the expansion is “increasingly broad based across sectors as well as across much of the global economy.”

While the revised growth rate is in line with President Donald Trump’s goal, economists generally see such a pace as unsustainable and expect growth to slow sometime in 2018. Trump and congressional Republicans are pushing a tax-cut plan with the aim of lifting GDP gains to 3 percent annually.

Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, continues to be the main driver of growth, though revisions showed it was slightly weaker than previously estimated on purchases of both durable and nondurable goods.

The biggest improvement came in business investment, which made a 1.2 percentage-point contribution to growth, up from 0.98 point in the initial estimate a month ago. In addition to greater spending on transportation equipment, the data also reflected more software spending. Nonresidential structures were revised to a bigger decline.

While the first look at third-quarter gross domestic income showed a pickup, the prior quarter was revised downward by 0.6 percentage point, reflecting a smaller gain in wages and salaries. The average of GDP and GDI was a 2.9 percent gain. Corporate profits grew, albeit at a slower year-over-year pace than in the prior period.

Price data in the GDP report showed inflation remains behind the Fed’s 2 percent goal. Excluding food and energy, the central bank’s preferred price index tied to personal spending rose at a 1.4 percent annualized rate last quarter, revised from 1.3 percent and following a second-quarter gain of 0.9 percent.
Other Details

Net exports added 0.43 percentage point to growth, revised up from 0.41 point; inventories added 0.8 point, revised up from 0.73 point
Gross domestic income, adjusted for inflation, rose 2.5 percent after a downwardly revised 2.3 percent gain in the prior three months; second-quarter wages and salaries were revised downward by $26.5 billion
Nonresidential fixed investment -- which includes spending on equipment, structures and intellectual property -- increased 4.7 percent, revised from 3.9 percent
Residential investment fell at a 5.1 percent rate, smaller than previous estimate of 6 percent drop
Stripping out trade and inventories -- the two most volatile components of the GDP calculation -- final sales to domestic purchasers climbed 2 percent, revised from 1.8 percent
Government spending increased at a 0.4 percent rate, revised from 0.1 percent decline; the figures reflected an upward revision to state and local construction spending
After-tax incomes adjusted for inflation increased at a 0.6 percent annual pace, revised from 0.5 percent; saving rate revised to 3.3 percent from 3.4 percent
GDP report is the second of three estimates for the quarter; the third is due in December as more data become available
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...rter-growth-revised-up-to-3-3-three-year-high
 
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hot dog..forget the fake news, forget the Swamps's daily soap operas..this is real and a reflection of MAGA.
De-regulation has gotten is this far

Now for Tax reform to lock it in, and unleash the full economic engine!

PS. Dow was a record high again!
 
hot dog..forget the fake news,forget the Swamps's daily soap operas..this is real and a reflection of MAGA

Now for Tax reform to lock it in, and unleash the full economic engine!

Have not seen numbers like that in a while! Fuckin A!
 
hot dog..forget the fake news, forget the Swamps's daily soap operas..this is real and a reflection of MAGA.
De-regulation has gotten is this far

Now for Tax reform to lock it in, and unleash the full economic engine!

PS. Dow was a record high again!

You're conflating the dow to economic numbers when that isn't the case.
 
So if all that is true why do we need a tax cut now? In fact, throwing one and half trillion unaccounted currency into a growing economy could have the opposite effect, so if things are so good, why the tax cut?
 
So if all that is true why do we need a tax cut now? In fact, throwing one and half trillion unaccounted currency into a growing economy could have the opposite effect, so if things are so good, why the tax cut?

So things can be even better?
 
the nation’s real gross domestic production (GDP) grew at a faster clip than previously thought
as business investment and state and local government spending boosted the U.S. economy in the third quarter, according to the “second” estimate released Wednesday (Nov. 29) by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).


The improved GDP report, the strongest growth in nearly three years, follows Monday’s report by the Conference Board that U.S. consumer confidence rose for the fifth consecutive month to its highest level in 17 years, and just ahead of the U.S. Senate’s expected vote on a $1.8 trillion tax reform package. Lynn Franco, director of Economic Indicators for the Conference Board, said consumers’ assessment of current conditions improved moderately, while their expectations regarding the short-term outlook improved more so, driven primarily by optimism of further improvements in the labor market.

“Consumers are entering the holiday season in very high spirits and foresee the economy expanding at a healthy pace into the early months of 2018,” Franco said of U.S. Consumer Confidence Index, which now stands at 129.5 compared to 126.2 in October.
 
the nation’s real gross domestic production (GDP) grew at a faster clip than previously thought
as business investment and state and local government spending boosted the U.S. economy in the third quarter, according to the “second” estimate released Wednesday (Nov. 29) by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).


The improved GDP report, the strongest growth in nearly three years, follows Monday’s report by the Conference Board that U.S. consumer confidence rose for the fifth consecutive month to its highest level in 17 years, and just ahead of the U.S. Senate’s expected vote on a $1.8 trillion tax reform package. Lynn Franco, director of Economic Indicators for the Conference Board, said consumers’ assessment of current conditions improved moderately, while their expectations regarding the short-term outlook improved more so, driven primarily by optimism of further improvements in the labor market.

“Consumers are entering the holiday season in very high spirits and foresee the economy expanding at a healthy pace into the early months of 2018,” Franco said of U.S. Consumer Confidence Index, which now stands at 129.5 compared to 126.2 in October.

So I'll repeat my question again, if all that is true why do we need a tax cut now? In fact, throwing one and half trillion unaccounted currency into a growing economy could have the opposite effect, so if things are so good, why the tax cut?
 
So if all that is true why do we need a tax cut now? In fact, throwing one and half trillion unaccounted currency into a growing economy could have the opposite effect, so if things are so good, why the tax cut?
inflation is still below the Fed's target. A lot of the DOW is predicated on tax reform.
Business is finally INVESTING -not just hoarding profits. Wages are up.

Tax reform is much more then "tax cuts" -it's simplification
( meaning business and individuals make decisions based on market forces,and not just tax policy).

It's also about competitive rates globally. That means jobs stay here and production goes up.
 
Aren't you gonna tell us that "its the Obama recovery still going strong"....???

Aw - you mad because you started a stupid thread & got called on it?

Or are you still mad about incorrectly stating yesterday that I only singled out journalists who were "killed", and you scampered away from that thread embarrassed?

Nah; Trump owns this economy now, for better or worse. I made my comment on it, bravs.
 
So you want to add one and half trillion on to the National Debt when it isn't necessary so that which is supposedly good can get better? Doesn't even make sense

Please show me a single federal tax cut which has resulted decreased revenue to the federal government.
 
So you want to add one and half trillion on to the National Debt when it isn't necessary so that which is supposedly good can get better? Doesn't even make sense
over ten years? that's peanuts.
any debt will get mitigated by dynamic growth -as opposed to the CBO static scoring that showed the $1.5t

( Obama added like $10t and you're worried about $1.5t??)

https://taxfoundation.org/economic-growth-drives-level-tax-revenue/
People often think of tax revenue as a function of tax rates.
If you want to raise more tax revenue, raise tax rates. If you don’t want to lose revenue, don’t cut tax rates.

Reality isn’t so simple. Instead, economic growth is often the key driver of tax revenues.
 
Aren't you gonna tell us that "its the Obama recovery still going strong"....???

Truth be told, it is a continuation of the Obama economy, economic indicators aren't reset at zero every time a new President takes office, the only thing this President has done is not screw it up, yet
 
The economy doesn't operate in a vacuum. It doesn't stop and restart when there's a new President.

Yes the President matters but there is more to the economy than that.

3.3% growth is great. But for Trump supporters I'd be careful giving him all the credit because we are sitting on a massive bubble and if you take credit now you take blame when it pops.
 
The economy doesn't operate in a vacuum. It doesn't stop and restart when there's a new President.

Yes the President matters but there is more to the economy than that.

3.3% growth is great. But for Trump supporters I'd be careful giving him all the credit because we are sitting on a massive bubble and if you take credit now you take blame when it pops.

I hope that doesn't happen, but you can be sure they won't do that. Anatta will be the 1st to start a thread blaming the swamp, or Dems, or fake news, or the deep state.
 
Truth be told, it is a continuation of the Obama economy, economic indicators aren't reset at zero every time a new President takes office, the only thing this President has done is not screw it up, yet

It was a weak recovery that is now a massive bubble. Should we send Obama flowers?
 
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