Gross domestic product expanded at a 2.6 percent annual pace after
the third quarter's spectacular 5 percent rate, the Commerce
Department said in its first GDP snapshot on Friday.
The slowdown, which follows two back-to-back quarters of very strong
growth, is likely to be short-lived given the enormous tailwind from
lower gasoline prices. Most economists believe fundamentals in the
United States are strong enough to cushion the blow on growth from
weakening overseas economies.
Even with the moderation in the fourth quarter, growth remained
above the 2.5 percent pace, which is considered to be the economy's
potential. Economists had expected the economy to expand at a 3
percent rate in the fourth quarter.
For all of 2014, the economy grew 2.4 percent compared to 2.2
percent in 2013. The report came two days after the Federal Reserve
said the economy was expanding at a "solid pace," an upgraded
assessment that keeps it on track to start raising interest rates
this year.
The U.S. central bank has kept its short-term interest rate near
zero since December 2008 and most economists expect a mid-year
lift-off.
Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S.
economic activity, advanced at a 4.3 percent pace in the fourth
quarter - the fastest since the first quarter of 2006 and an
acceleration from the third quarter's 3.2 percent pace.
According to government data, gasoline prices have plunged 43
percent since June, leaving Americans with more money for
discretionary spending. A strengthening labor market, despite
sluggish wage growth, is also a boost.
The strong pace of consumer spending, however, was overshadowed by a
drop in capital expenditure. Business spending on equipment fell at
a 1.9 percent rate. It was the largest contraction since the second
quarter of 2009.
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Business spending on equipment had advanced at an 11 percent rate in
the third quarter. Last quarter's weakness could reflect cuts or
delays in undertaking investment projects by companies in the oil
industry. But it could also be payback after two back-to-back
quarters of robust gains.
A wider trade deficit, as slower global growth curbed exports and
solid domestic demand sucked in imports, subtracted 1.02 percentage
point from GDP growth in the fourth quarter. Trade had added 0.78
percentage point to third-quarter growth.
Restocking by businesses to meet growing demand contributed 0.82
percentage point to fourth-quarter GDP.
Other details of the report were mixed. Government spending was a
drag as a defense-driven investment burst faded. Residential
construction made a mild contribution to GDP growth.
With gasoline prices plummeting, a key measure of inflation fell 0.5
percent, the weakest reading since the first quarter of 2009.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao)
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