US economy grows 4.2 percent in second quarter
Washington: The roaring growth recorded by the US economy in the second quarter was even faster than first reported, with new numbers showing a bigger boost in corporate spending, the government reported Wednesday.
The uptick in estimates of second quarter spending by companies was sure to comfort President Donald Trump and supporters of December´s sweeping corporate tax
cuts who argue that lowering corporations´ tax burdens will spur investment and growth.
Gross Domestic Product advanced at an annual rate of 4.2 percent in the April-to-June period, a tenth of a point faster than initial estimates showed last month and still the fastest growth in almost four years, according to the Commerce Department.
Economists had been expecting a slight downward revision.
Many economists view the second quarter growth as a blip, juiced by one-off factors unlikely to be sustainable, and estimates for growth in the third quarter now hover around a still-robust three percent.
But Trump last month hailed the economy´s renewed vigor, claiming credit for boosting growth above all with tax cuts and by aggressively confronting trading partners.
Still, much of the second-quarter boom was due to a boost in exports as merchants raced to buy American goods -- principally soybeans and petroleum -- ahead of China´s retaliatory tariffs that took effect in July. The pendulum is expected to swing in the other direction in coming months.
Corporate profits rose $72.4 billion, up from $26.7 billion in the first quarter when many companies reported one-time accounting charges due to changes in the tax laws.
Growth is trending higher in the world´s largest economy this year, putting Trump´s annual growth target of three percent within reach.
Much of the upward revision in spending by companies reflected investment in computer software, according to the department. Meanwhile, estimates for the value of imports, notably petroleum, fell and federal and local government spending moved up.
The new estimate was based on a more complete set of data than previously available and will be revised again next month.
US defense spending also rose six percent for the quarter, the biggest increase in nine years, five tenths of a percentage point faster than previously estimated.
These gains offset what officials described as "widespread" downward revisions to consumer spending, with small subtractions from purchases of cars, furniture and gasoline, among other items.
Downward revisions in the housing sector, which has suffered declining sales and construction this year, also weighed on the outcome.
With budget deficits ballooning, the White House is betting on faster growth to help offset the cost of the tax cuts, which economists say is unlikely.
-
'Legally Blonde The Musical' Star Amber Davies Makes Raw Confession After Burnout -
Superbugs On Rise As Climate Change Drives Antibiotic Resistance, Study Finds -
Microsoft AI CEO Says AI Chip Shortage Will Decide Tech Winners In 2026 -
Tiger Woods' Net Worth Explained Amid His Shocking DUI Arrest -
BTS Launch ‘BTS 2.0’ Era With Explosive ARIRANG Comeback -
Taylor Swift's Fiancé Travis Kelce Labelled 'dumb, Fugly, Chubby' -
Sarah Ferguson Changes Strategy As She Plans 'dramatic Reinvention' -
Inside Britney Spears’ Yacht Trip After Going Private On Instagram -
Mistral Raises $830M For Nvidia-backed Data Centers, Advancing Europe’s AI Sovereignty -
WhatsApp Beta Brings Full Messaging To CarPlay Interface -
Who Is Royal Family's 'next Superstar' And Genuine Asset To Crown? -
West Coast House Pioneer DJ Dan Breathes His Last At 57 -
Shocking AI Mistake: Tennessee Woman Falsely Arrested By Facial Recognition -
Camila Morrone Issues Challenge To Hollywood As It Pressures Women -
Tech CEOs Blames AI To Justify Job Cuts -
All Big Names Set To Feature In BBC's Queen Elizabeth II Documentary: See List