Zürcher Nachrichten - US economic growth solid but below expectations as election nears

EUR -
AED 3.977584
AFN 72.97331
ALL 98.471483
AMD 418.201653
ANG 1.947741
AOA 987.091608
ARS 1069.655368
AUD 1.646242
AWG 1.949276
AZN 1.840739
BAM 1.957212
BBD 2.182094
BDT 129.143152
BGN 1.954485
BHD 0.40824
BIF 3141.094707
BMD 1.082931
BND 1.432446
BOB 7.467386
BRL 6.240496
BSD 1.080689
BTN 90.843526
BWP 14.506732
BYN 3.536751
BYR 21225.450121
BZD 2.178391
CAD 1.507916
CDF 3151.329687
CHF 0.939378
CLF 0.037622
CLP 1038.09406
CNY 7.713394
CNH 7.709706
COP 4723.756412
CRC 554.797619
CUC 1.082931
CUP 28.697675
CVE 110.344593
CZK 25.387145
DJF 192.450594
DKK 7.461363
DOP 65.08785
DZD 144.589697
EGP 52.781738
ERN 16.243967
ETB 129.142344
FJD 2.469735
FKP 0.828625
GBP 0.834929
GEL 2.956749
GGP 0.828625
GHS 17.561667
GIP 0.828625
GMD 75.267848
GNF 9320.809259
GTQ 8.354026
GYD 226.10309
HKD 8.415793
HNL 27.261916
HRK 7.460345
HTG 142.424047
HUF 408.167823
IDR 16955.398534
ILS 4.018379
IMP 0.828625
INR 91.064166
IQD 1415.734256
IRR 45596.815328
ISK 148.535001
JEP 0.828625
JMD 170.972535
JOD 0.768122
JPY 165.738814
KES 139.697818
KGS 92.912751
KHR 4393.209432
KMF 493.221338
KPW 974.637772
KRW 1493.568127
KWD 0.331994
KYD 0.900658
KZT 529.777025
LAK 23692.089332
LBP 96831.145235
LKR 317.368921
LRD 207.503507
LSL 19.141684
LTL 3.197614
LVL 0.655054
LYD 5.216811
MAD 10.66149
MDL 19.371884
MGA 4995.695706
MKD 61.647512
MMK 3517.318063
MNT 3679.800005
MOP 8.648238
MRU 42.730822
MUR 49.934159
MVR 16.633359
MWK 1873.986334
MXN 21.805874
MYR 4.742197
MZN 69.210057
NAD 19.141684
NGN 1777.707392
NIO 39.769053
NOK 11.869548
NPR 145.351185
NZD 1.809573
OMR 0.416925
PAB 1.08068
PEN 4.067772
PGK 4.328162
PHP 63.051476
PKR 300.167099
PLN 4.342051
PYG 8603.285077
QAR 3.940242
RON 4.975657
RSD 117.071326
RUB 105.070444
RWF 1469.753361
SAR 4.06699
SBD 9.024652
SCR 14.734655
SDG 651.385063
SEK 11.556667
SGD 1.433535
SHP 0.828625
SLE 24.586475
SLL 22708.520838
SOS 617.64266
SRD 37.174834
STD 22414.487933
SVC 9.455908
SYP 2720.897239
SZL 19.146899
THB 36.570267
TJS 11.509502
TMT 3.790259
TND 3.347515
TOP 2.536337
TRY 37.11639
TTD 7.324283
TWD 34.63582
TZS 2945.573002
UAH 44.699568
UGX 3960.857004
USD 1.082931
UYU 44.972439
UZS 13816.96631
VEF 3922974.904603
VES 45.748164
VND 27392.742898
VUV 128.567792
WST 3.033489
XAF 656.427457
XAG 0.032104
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.926675
XDR 0.812301
XOF 656.436556
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.08476
ZAR 19.111081
ZMK 9747.674879
ZMW 28.774021
ZWL 348.703382
  • RBGPF

    -2.0000

    61

    -3.28%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    24.65

    +0.32%

  • NGG

    -0.1200

    65

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    -2.3500

    72.87

    -3.22%

  • GSK

    -1.1650

    37.005

    -3.15%

  • RIO

    -0.5150

    66.065

    -0.78%

  • BTI

    -0.1650

    34.295

    -0.48%

  • BP

    0.1250

    29.485

    +0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.8050

    47.105

    -1.71%

  • CMSD

    -0.0170

    24.823

    -0.07%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    9.36

    +0.85%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.22

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    4.3700

    136.01

    +3.21%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    12.31

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.03

    +0.38%

  • BCE

    -0.2450

    32.215

    -0.76%

US economic growth solid but below expectations as election nears
US economic growth solid but below expectations as election nears / Photo: Frederic J. BROWN - AFP/File

US economic growth solid but below expectations as election nears

The US economy undershot expectations in the third quarter even as growth remained resilient, according to government data Wednesday, weighing on inflation-weary voters less than a week to the presidential election.

Text size:

The world's biggest economy expanded at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the July-September period, helped by consumption and government spending although slowing from the second quarter's 3.0 percent pace, said the Department of Commerce.

Despite spending more, American consumers have been downbeat about their job and financial prospects, with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris still trailing Republican Donald Trump in opinion polls about the economy.

"If you were to look at numbers like GDP growth or income or consumption, or even employment, you'd say: 'Gosh, this economy is in pretty good shape,'" said Dan North, senior economist for Allianz Trade North America.

"The one thing that completely destroys that narrative is the inflation that consumers have had to deal with," he told AFP.

The US economy was anticipated to expand by an annual 3.0 percent rate in the third quarter, according to a market consensus published by Briefing.com.

Still, US growth this year is due to outpace other advanced economies like Germany, France and the United Kingdom, according to recent International Monetary Fund estimates.

On Wednesday, the Commerce Department said the GDP figure reflected "increases in consumer spending, exports, and federal government spending."

But the deceleration from the second quarter was mainly due to a downturn in private inventory investment, alongside a bigger drop in residential fixed investment.

An October New York Times/Siena College poll of likely voters released last week showed that economic issues remained top-of-mind around two weeks before the election.

Those polled were slightly more inclined to trust Trump to do a better job handling the economy, with 52 percent of respondents preferring him to 45 percent support for Harris.

- Inflation 'hard to swallow' -

North explains that as compared with January 2021, when price increases started ballooning, wages have cumulatively grown 18 percent.

But households have had to contend with larger overall upticks on expenses such as food, shelter and gasoline -- with cost increases ranging from 22 percent to 29 percent.

This is likely the reason that voters feel the economy is doing poorly despite job and wage growth, alongside relatively low unemployment levels.

"Does the man on the street care if GDP is 2.8 or 3.1? No, they want to know how the inflation is affecting them," said North. "It's been pretty hard to swallow over the past few years."

Workers may have had 17 months of positive real wage growth, but they had 25 months of negative growth prior to that, ZipRecruiter chief economist Julia Pollak noted.

With workers accustomed to positive wage growth prior to the coronavirus pandemic, many still feel like their salaries need to catch up, she added.

- Overreliance on credit -

Consumers are also turning to credit cards and dipping into their savings to fund spending, piling pressure especially on lower-income households and younger people.

Economists point to higher credit card delinquencies in recent years.

Credit card delinquency rates hit a near 12-year high in the first quarter this year, according to a report published in July by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

On Wednesday, the biggest support to GDP growth will be from consumer spending, with business investment set to "pack another positive punch," said Oxford Economics deputy chief US economist Michael Pearce.

"Election uncertainty could shave some off business investment in the fourth quarter, but the effects are not normally that large," Pearce told AFP.

He added that the GDP growth figure is unlikely to sway the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision next week.

A.Wyss--NZN