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Economy Grows at Solid 4.1 Percent Pace
By JEANNINE AVERSA, Associated
Press Writer
WASHINGTON - America's economic recovery
ended 2003 on a good note, growing at a solid 4.1 percent annual
rate, and is expected to do even better in the opening quarter
of this year.
The latest reading on gross domestic product for the October-to-December
quarter was the same as a previous estimate made a month ago,
the Commerce Department (news - web sites) reported Thursday.
That was consistent with economists' forecasts.
GDP (news - web sites) measures that value of all goods and services
produced within the United States and is considered the most important
barometer of the economy's health.
Economic growth in the current January-to-March quarter is expected
to clock in at a rate of 4.5 percent, according to some analysts'
forecasts. Growth in the April-to-June quarter also should be
around that pace, they said.
Tax refunds and other tax incentives should motivate consumers
and businesses to spend and invest more energizing the
economy in the first half of this year, economists said.
"I think we should have another couple of good quarters,"
said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com. "The only
thing we can be hoping for now is some job growth."
On Wall Street, the GDP report helped to lift stocks. The Dow
Jones industrials gained 92 points and the Nasdaq was up 35 points
in late morning trading.
It's the second half of the year, though, that some economists
are a bit concerned about.
If the lackluster job climate persists, some worry that consumers
might turn cautious, thus raising the risk of an economic slowdown
in the final two quarters of this year.
The economy added just 21,000 jobs in February all of them
in government a Labor Department (news - web sites) survey
of payrolls showed. Job growth has been painfully slow despite
better economic activity.
Since President Bush (news - web sites) took office in January
2001, the economy has lost 2.2 million jobs.
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry (news -
web sites) has pointed to this as evidence that Bush's economic
policies aren't working. Bush, who has defended his policies,
wants Congress to make his tax cuts permanent, contending that
this will make the economy stronger and spur job growth.
In other economic news, new claims for unemployment benefits rose
last week by a seasonally adjusted 1,000 to 339,000, the Labor
Department said.
And, the National Association of Realtors reported that sales
of previously owned homes grew by 2 percent in February to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 6.12 million.
Low interest rates beckoned buyers and pushed home sales to record
levels in 2003. Sales are expected to be brisk this year, too.
"With a strong underlying demand for housing from a growing
population in a recovering economy, we could be flirting with
another record this year," said David Lereah, the association's
chief economist.
Although the fourth quarter's GDP growth rate was slower than
the red-hot 8.2 percent pace of the third quarter, the economy's
performance in the second half of 2003 marked the fastest back-to-back
quarterly increases since the first two quarters of 1984.
Until the second half of last year, the economy
was struggling mightily to get back on firm footing after being
knocked asunder by the 2001 recession, terror attacks and fallout
from a wave of corporate accounting scandals.
A noteworthy factor in the pickup in the second
half of last year was brisk spending by businesses. Businesses
finally cast off some of the caution that had previously restrained
capital investment.
It was big cutbacks in capital spending that helped
to thrust the economy into recession. Economists said a sustained
turnaround in capital spending is a crucial ingredient for the
recovery to be lasting.
Businesses boosted spending on equipment and software
at a 14.9 percent rate in the fourth quarter. That was a tad slower
than the 15.1 percent pace estimated a month ago and came after
a 17.6 percent growth rate in the third quarter.
Still, businesses cut spending on new plants and
buildings in both the third and fourth quarters. That's been an
area that has remained weak.
A measure of after-tax corporate profits, adjusted
for changes in inventories and capital depreciation, rose by 7.6
percent in the fourth quarter, following a 10.1 percent increase
in the prior quarter. Economists hope that continued good profit
growth will be an incentive for businesses to step up hiring.
Consumers, whose spending accounts for roughly two-thirds
of all economic activity, also helped the economy. Consumer spending
rose at a respectable 3.2 percent pace in the fourth quarter.
That was better than the last estimate of a 2.7 percent pace and
followed a 6.9 percent growth rate in the third quarter.
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