By Lucia
Mutikani
(Reuters) -
The economy unexpectedly contracted in the fourth quarter, suffering its first
decline since the recession ended more than three years ago as businesses
scaled back on restocking and government spending plunged.
Gross
domestic product fell at a 0.1 percent annual rate after growing at a 3.1
percent clip in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday.
That was
the worst performance since the second quarter of 2009 and showed the economy
entering the new year with no momentum, but economists cautioned against
reading too much into the decline in output.
"You
got a combination of inventories and defense which are taking more than 2
percentage points off the growth rate," said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington , Massachusetts .
"This is not an indicator of recession."
Still, the
contraction, coming against a backdrop of tightening fiscal policy, could
create an urgency for policymakers to deal with outstanding budget issues.
Economists
polled by Reuters had expected output to increase at a 1.1 percent rate. None
of the economists surveyed had predicted a contraction.
A pick-up in
consumer spending and a rebound in business investment curbed the slide in
output and offered some hope for the recovery, which will be severely tested as
Washington
tightens its belt.
A second
report showed private employers stepped up hiring in January, suggesting an
improvement in the labor market. An increase in job gains could help the
economy to weather the headwinds in the first half of the year.
The ADP
National Employment Report showed private payrolls rose 192,000 in January
after increasing 185,000 in December.
U.S.
Treasury debt prices rallied on the GDP number, while the dollar fell. Stock
futures extended losses.
The data
were published as officials at the Federal Reserve wrap-up a two-day meeting.
The report will likely provide ammunition for officials at the U.S. central
bank to stay on their ultra-accommodative policy stance.
Economists
say a growth pace in excess of 3 percent would be needed over a sustained
period to significantly lower high unemployment. The economy has struggled to
hold above a 2 percent growth pace.
For the
whole of 2012 the economy grew 2.2 percent.
The economy
was slammed by a monster storm in late October, which caused extensive damage
along the East Coast, which was expected to have cut around 0.5 percentage point
off fourth-quarter growth.
The
recovery also had to deal with uncertainty over the so-called fiscal cliff of
scheduled tax hikes and budget cuts, which hurt confidence even though data
suggests that households and businesses largely shrugged off the worries.
SOME BRIGHT
SIGNS
Businesses,
caught with too much inventory in their warehouses in the third quarter, slowed
their stock building in the final three months of the year.
That
slowdown sliced 1.27 percentage points from fourth-quarter GDP growth. That was
the biggest drag in two years. Excluding inventories, the economy grew at a 1.1
percent rate, slowing from the third quarter's 2.4 percent.
Government
spending tumbled at a 6.6 percent rate, as defense outlays plunged at a 22.2
percent pace, wiping out the previous quarter's gains. Government subtracted
1.33 percentage points form growth. The decline in defense spending was the
largest since 1972.
Export
weakness also weighed on growth. Exports have been hampered by a recession in Europe , a cooling Chinese economy and storm and
strike-related port disruptions. Overall trade cut a quarter of a percentage
point from GDP growth. Exports fell for the first time since the first quarter
of 2009.
But not all
the details in the report were bleak.
Importantly,
consumer and business spending showed some strength, and income available to
households after taxes and inflation increased substantially in the fourth
quarter.
In
addition, the saving rate increased to 4.7 percent from 3.6 percent in the
third quarter, which should support future spending.
Consumer
spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic activity, rose at
a 2.2 percent rate, accelerating from the prior quarter's 1.6 percent growth
pace.
Business
investment rebounded after its first drop in 1-1/2 years in the prior quarter.
The housing market was another bright spot. Residential construction grew at a
15.3 percent rate after notching a 13.5 percent growth pace in the third
quarter.
Homebuilding
added to growth last year for the first time since 2005.
(Additional
reporting by Herb Lash and Leah Schnurr in New York ; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/01/30/us-usa-economy-idUSBRE90T07520130130
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