In their second estimate of the US GDP for the third quarter of 2017, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported that the US economy was growing at a +3.30% annual rate, up +0.32% from the previous estimate and up +0.24% from the prior quarter.
The changes from the prior estimate reflect higher commercial fixed investment, higher inventory growth, more governmental spending and improved foreign trade. Consumer spending was essentially neutral. The BEA’s “bottom line” (their “Real Final Sales of Domestic Product”, which excludes inventories) increased to +2.50%, down -0.44% from the prior quarter.
Real annualized household disposable income dropped another -$63 to $39,217 (in 2009 dollars). The household savings rate also dropped another -0.1% to 3.3%, the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2007.
For this revision, the BEA assumed an effective annualized deflator of 2.12%. During the same quarter (July 2017 through September 2017) the inflation recorded by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) in their CPI-U index was 4.31%. Underestimating inflation results in optimistic growth rates, and if the BEA’s “nominal” data was deflated using CPI-U inflation information the headline growth number would have been materially lower at an +1.19% annualized growth rate.
Among the notable items in the report :
— The headline contribution from consumer expenditures for goods was reported to be slightly weaker at +0.89% (down -0.27% from the prior quarter).
— The contribution to the headline from consumer spending on services was essentially static at +0.71% (down -0.38% from the prior quarter). The combined consumer contribution to the headline number was +1.62%, down -0.62% from 2Q-2017.
— The headline contribution from commercial private fixed investments increased to +0.39%, up +0.14 from the previous estimate but still down -0.14% from the prior quarter. That continued to reflect a contraction in residential construction.
— Inventory growth provided a material boost to the headline number (+0.80%). This was a +0.68% improvement from the prior quarter. It is important to remember that the BEA’s inventory numbers are exceptionally noisy (and susceptible to significant distortions/anomalies caused by commodity price or currency swings) while ultimately representing a zero reverting (and long-term essentially zero-sum) series.
— Governmental spending was reported to be growing at a +0.07% rate. This was a +0.10% improvement from the prior quarter.
— Exports contributed +0.27% to the headline number, down -0.15% from the prior quarter.
— Imports added +0.17% to the headline, which was up +0.39% from the prior quarter. In aggregate, foreign trade added +0.44% to the headline number.
— The “real final sales of domestic product” grew at an annualized 2.50%, down -0.44% from the prior quarter. This is the BEA’s “bottom line” measurement of the economy and it excludes the inventory data.
— As mentioned above, real per-capita annual disposable income reportedly dropped -$63 per annum. At the same time the household savings rate was reported to have dropped to 3.3% (down -0.4% from the prior quarter). It is important to keep this line item in perspective: real per-capita annual disposable income is up only +6.93% in aggregate since the second quarter of 2008 — a meager annualized +0.73% growth rate over the past 37 quarters.
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