Business

U.S. growth slows to 1% pace

The U.S. economy grew at a meagre one per cent annual pace this spring, a slower rate than previously estimated.

The U.S. economy grew at a meagre one per cent annual pace this spring, a slower rate than previously estimated.

The downward revision will likely increase fears that the economy is at risk of another recession.

Fewer exports and weaker growth in business stockpiles led the Commerce Department to lower its estimate for the April-June quarter from its previous rate of 1.3 per cent growth. That means the economy expanded only 0.7 per cent in the first six months of the year.

Economists note that nine of the past 11 recessions since the Second World War have been preceded by a period of growth of one per cent or less. The weaker growth could rattle an already edgy stock market, which has lost 12 per cent of its value since July 21.

The report Friday shows the economy was barely expanding even before this month's stock market plunge. Economists worry that the Wall Street sell-off could cause consumers and businesses to pull back on spending and investment.

Stock futures fluctuated mildly after the report was released.

High gas and food prices have already eroded consumers' buying power. Spending increased only 0.4 per cent in the April-June period, the weakest growth since the final three months of 2009. The revision showed spending was a bit higher than the government's first estimate of 0.1 per cent growth.

People bought fewer long-lasting manufactured goods, such as autos and appliances. Those purchases fell 5.1 per cent this spring, the biggest drop since the final three months of 2008. That partly reflects a shortage of autos on many dealer lots after the March 11 earthquake in Japan. Consumers spending accounts for 70 per cent of growth.

Government spending contracted for the third straight quarter. And spending by state and local governments declined for the seventh time in eight quarters.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will deliver a highly-anticipated speech later Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyo. Investors hope he will signal that the Fed will launch a new effort to boost the economy, but analysts don't expect anything ambitious.

The central bank has already cut the benchmark short-term interest rate it controls to nearly zero, and last week pledged to keep it there until mid-2013. But so far lower interest rates haven't helped: mortgage rates, for example, are already at record lows, and home sales are still falling.

Several dismal economic reports have suggested the economy worsened in the July-September quarter, sending the stock market lower. Manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic region contracted in August by the most in more than two years, a survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found. A Richmond Fed survey released Tuesday and a New York Fed survey last week also pointed to slowdowns in those areas, although not as severe.

There have been some positive signs. The economy added 117,000 net jobs in July, twice the number added in each of the previous two months. Consumers spent more on retail goods last month than in any month since March. U.S. automakers rebounded last month to boost factory production by the most since the Japan crisis.

Most economists aren't forecasting a recession. JPMorgan Chase projects the U.S. economy will grow only 0.9 per cent this year and 1.7 per cent in 2012, much lower than the bank's estimates just a few weeks ago. Other economists have made similar downgrades.