by Brian Wesbury, Chief Economist, & Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist, First Trust Portfolios
The economy continued to grow in the first quarter at what we estimate is a 2.6% annual rate. Â Thatâs a slowdown from the 3.1% rate in 2023, but still good compared to the past couple of decades when the average growth rate has been 2.0%.
However, we think a chunk of recent growth is artificial, and temporary, the by-product of too much government. Â Directly, this includes ârealâ (inflation-adjusted) government purchases that grew 4.6% in 2023 and we estimate grew at a 2.3% annual rate in the first quarter.
It also includes the indirect effects of the expansion in the budget deficit in FY 2023. Â The official deficit didnât expand much, but thatâs because President Biden announced a plan to forgive student loans in 2022 and then the Supreme Court struck it down in 2023. Â Neither of these affected the governmentâs cash flow but they did change official government accounting. Â Taking them out means the deficit expanded to 7.5% of GDP in FY 2023 from 3.9% in FY 2022.
In addition, and as we explained recently (MMO, April 8), if monetary policy were really tight, inflation would be persistently declining. Â But CPI prices were up 3.0% in the year ending in June 2023 and are now up 3.5% in the past year. Â This suggests residual effects of past monetary looseness are still boosting the economy.
We estimate that Real GDP expanded at a 2.6% annual rate in the first quarter, mostly accounted for by an increase in consumer spending.
Consumption: âRealâ (inflation-adjusted) retail sales outside the auto sector declined at a 3.0% annual rate in Q1 while auto sales declined at an 8.7% rate. Â However, it looks like real services, which makes up most of consumer spending, soared at a 4.7% pace. Â Thatâs the fastest pace for service growth since the re-opening from COVID in 2020-21. Â Excluding that re-opening, when all the data were whacky, it's the fastest pace for service growth since the peak of the Internet Bubble in 2000. Â Putting it all together, we estimate that real consumer spending on goods and services, combined, increased at a 3.1% rate, adding 2.1 points to the real GDP growth rate (3.1 times the consumption share of GDP, which is 68%, equals 2.1).
Business Investment: Â We estimate a 2.4% growth rate for business investment, with gains in intellectual property leading the way, while commercial construction declined. Â A 2.4% growth rate would add 0.3 points to real GDP growth. Â (2.4 times the 14% business investment share of GDP equals 0.3).
Home Building: Â Residential construction is showing some resilience in spite of some lingering pain from higher mortgage rates. Â Home building looks like it grew at a 5.0% rate, which would add 0.2 points to real GDP growth. Â (5.0 times the 4% residential construction share of GDP equals 0.2).
Government: Â Only direct government purchases of goods and services (not transfer payments) count when calculating GDP. Â We estimate these purchases were up at a 2.3% rate in Q1, which would add 0.4 points to the GDP growth rate (2.3 times the 17% government purchase share of GDP equals 0.4).
Trade: Â Looks like the trade deficit expanded in Q1, as exports grew but imports grew even faster. Â In government accounting, a larger trade deficit means slower growth, even if exports and imports both grew. Â Weâre projecting net exports will subtract 0.5 points from real GDP growth.
Inventories: Â Inventory accumulation looks like it picked up in Q1, but only slightly versus Q4, translating into what we estimate will be a 0.1 point addition to the growth rate of real GDP.
Add it all up, and we get a 2.6% annual real GDP growth rate for the first quarter. Â Solid for now, but we expect slower growth later this year as the temporary effects of government deficit spending wear off.
Brian S. Wesbury â Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA â Deputy Chief EconomistÂ
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