3% GDP consecutive quarters

anatta

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The U.S. economy, bolstered by business investment, grew at a solid annual rate of 3 percent in the third quarter. It marks the first time in three years that growth has hit at least 3 percent for two consecutive quarters.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that the July-September advance in the gross domestic product — the country's total output of goods and services — followed a 3.1 percent rise in the second quarter. It was the strongest two-quarter showing since back-to-back gains of 4.6 percent and 5.2 percent in the second and third quarters of 2014.

The economy accelerated this summer despite the impact of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, which many private economists believe shaved at least one-half percentage point off growth.

The third quarter performance was certain to be cited by President Donald Trump, who pledged during last year's campaign that his economic program would boost growth from the anemic 2.2 percent averages seen since the country emerged from the Great Recession in mid-2009. Trump during the campaign said his policies of tax cuts, deregulation and tougher enforcement of trade laws would achieve growth of 4 percent or better, though his first budget projects growth hitting 3 percent in the coming years.

Private economists believe even 3 percent annual gains will be hard to achieve for an economy facing a slowdown in productivity and an aging workforce.

For all of 2017, private forecasters believe the economy will grow at an annual rate of around 2.2 percent, rising to growth of 2.4 percent in 2018. That would be an improvement from the meager gain of 1.5 percent in 2016 but would still fall below the expectations of the Trump administration.

Harvey made initial landfall in Texas on Aug. 25, and Irma hit Florida on Sept. 10. The government said while various activities from oil and gas refineries in Texas to farming in Florida were affected, it could not break out an estimate of how much the hurricanes had decreased growth.

However, private economists have estimated that the storms sapped anywhere from one-half percentage point to 1 percentage point from growth. Analysts believe much of the lost output will recover as rebuilding begins.

The 3 percent growth rate for third quarter GDP and the 3.1 percent increase in the second quarter followed a much weaker 1.2 percent increase in the first quarter.

In the third quarter, consumer spending slowed slightly to 2.4 percent from a sizzling 3.3 percent in the second quarter. The slowdown was offset to some extent by a strong 8.6 percent gain in business investment in equipment and an increase in business rebuilding of inventories, which added 0.7 percentage point to third quarter growth.

Other areas of the report showed weakness. Government spending fell for a third straight quarter, dropping 0.1 percent. Residential construction fell at a 6 percent rate following a 7.3 percent rate of decline in the second quarter.

Many analysts believe growth in the current quarter will come in around 2.7 percent.

The House on Thursday gave approval to a Republican-proposed budget that would provide for $1.5 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade. Administration officials have said the tax cuts will spur faster growth and the faster growth will erase much of the cost of the tax cuts. Democrats and many private economists have challenged that forecast.
 
If it's four straight quarters of 3% or above growth going into 2018 it's going to be tough going for democrats.

Look at States like Arizona and Alabama. I don't think the economy is playing much of a role in those races. Same for the VA governors race.

I mean it always matters of course but cultural issues and immigration play a bigger role than the national economy in local races.
 
We could be so lucky

Yeah, I predict growth will fall below -10% GDP by the end of Trump's term. Bernie Sanders will win by 90%-5% against the Libertarian candidate (Trump will get about 1% of the vote in the few states in which the Republican party is still registered).
 
Yeah, I predict growth will fall below -10% GDP by the end of Trump's term. Bernie Sanders will win by 90%-5% against the Libertarian candidate (Trump will get about 1% of the vote in the few states in which the Republican party is still registered).

The economy will explode upwards with Trump wrongly getting the credit
 
North Carolina be a lot smaller than Mass.

Wow, man. You actually believe that? I'm guessing that you also believed your middle school teacher when she told you that Mt. Washington was the highest mountain on the east coast.

By population:
NC 10,146,788
MA 6,811,779
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_population

By square miles:
NC 53,819
MA 10,554
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_and_territories_by_area

By GDP (millions):
NC 517,904
MA 507,913
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_GDP
 
Wow, man. You actually believe that? I'm guessing that you also believed your middle school teacher when she told you that Mt. Washington was the highest mountain on the east coast.

By population:
NC 10,146,788
MA 6,811,779
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_population

By square miles:
NC 53,819
MA 10,554
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_and_territories_by_area

By GDP (millions):
NC 517,904
MA 507,913
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_GDP

The only way that matters, grey matter.
 
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