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Questioning GDP: Why Government Spending Shouldn’t Inflate Economic Health

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, many commentators complained over our rosy coverage of Thursday GDP numbers , after all it is hard to get excited about the economy when a bag of Doritos cost $6.

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US Economy Surges in Q2 2024, Exceeding Expectations!

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, the US economy expanded at an annualized rate of 2.8% in the second quarter of 2024, according to preliminary data released yesterday. This growth rate surpasses analysts’ predictions of 2.1% and signals continued economic resilience as inflation cools.

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Underlying Inflation Accelerated to a Four-month High in September

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of underlying inflation saw an uptick to a four-month high in September, and consumer spending also showed an increase, leaving the possibility of another interest rate hike in the near future. The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes volatile food and energy components, rose by 0.3% in September, as reported by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Inflation-adjusted consumer spending saw a 0.4% increase last month.

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US Gross Domestic Product Grows at a Robust 4.9% Rate in the Third Quarter

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, the U.S. economy exceeded expectations by exhibiting robust growth in the third quarter, driven by a resilient consumer sector despite higher interest rates, ongoing inflationary pressures, and various domestic and global challenges. According to the Commerce Department’s report, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which measures all goods and services produced in the U.S., expanded at an annualized rate of 4.9% from July through September, a significant acceleration from the unrevised 2.1% pace in the second quarter.

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New Jersey Q1 GDP and Personal Income Continue to Trail the Nation

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  • Q1 real GDP growth at a 1.0% annual rate, half the US average of 2.0%
  • Personal income grew 5.8% fueled by a spurt in transfer payments, not growth of earnings.

 

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Morristown NJ, On June 30th, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis issued its report on the Gross Domestic Product by State and Personal Income by State, 1st Quarter 2023, covering the months of January through March 2023. Dr. Charles Steindel, the former Chief Economist of the State of New Jersey, analyzed the report for the Garden State Initiative:

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House Republicans Pass Fiscal Reform and Debt-ceiling

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Washington DC, The latest monthly report from Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is filled with grim numbers.

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Real gross domestic product increased at an annual rate of 2.6 percent in the third quarter of 2022

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Washington DC, Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.6 percent in the third quarter of 2022 (table 1), according to the “advance” estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the second quarter, real GDP decreased 0.6 percent.

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U.S. GDP Drops 1.4%

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) the U.S. GDP shrank at an annualized rate of 1.4 percent during the first three months of 2022, according to the BEA’s first estimate of first-quarter economic growth. Economists expected U.S. GDP to have fallen by an annualized rate of 1 percent. Marking an abrupt reversal for an economy coming off its best performance since 1984.

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GDP Grew at a Stronger than Expected 6.9% Pace

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Washington DC, Real gross domestic product(GDP) increased at an annual rate of 6.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2021 , according to the “advance” estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the
third quarter, real GDP increased2.3 percent.

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President Biden’s tax proposals would decrease the GDP by 0.9 percent and American incomes would fall by an average of 1 percent

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, according to the Tax Foundation , when combining the economic impact of President Biden’s tax proposals with the benefit of infrastructure spending, we estimate that long-run GDP would decrease by 0.9 percent and American incomes would fall by an average of 1 percent, resulting in 165,000 fewer U.S. jobs. Explore our full analysis to learn more about the major tax changes President Biden is proposing, as well as the estimated long-run economic, revenue, and distributional effects of the president’s tax and spending proposals.

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The U.S. economy grew far less than expected in the second quarter as inventory investment fell for the first time in nearly five years

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“Today’s (Friday’s)terrible GDP report is another signal that our economy is still struggling. It’s obvious that top-down, Washington-knows-best policies aren’t working and need to be replaced with ideas that empower people over special interests.” Rep. Scott Garrett CD-5

 

Inventory liquidation weighs on U.S. second-quarter GDP growth
By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. economy grew far less than expected in the second quarter as inventory investment fell for the first time in nearly five years, but a surge in consumer spending pointed to underlying strength.

Gross domestic product increased at a 1.2 percent annual rate after rising by a downwardly revised 0.8 percent pace in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said on Friday.

“Once the impact of a downward inventory adjustment is considered, the underlying pace of growth looks healthier than the headline number,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at IHS Markit in London.

The economy was previously reported to have expanded at a 1.1 percent pace in the first quarter. Economists had forecast GDP growth rising at a 2.6 percent rate in the last quarter.

While the inventory drawdown weighed on GDP growth, that is likely to provide a boost to output for the rest of the year. Excluding inventories, the economy grew at a 2.4 percent rate. A measure of domestic demand grew at a 2.7 percent pace.

The Federal Reserve said on Wednesday that near-term risks to the economic outlook had “diminished.” With the second-quarter GDP report, the government also published revisions to data going back to 2013 through the first quarter of 2016.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/consumers-seen-powering-u-economic-050213059.html?soc_src=social-sh&soc_trk=tw

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Obama’s 2016 Budget: Analysis shows plan would result in reduced GDP and the loss of upwards of 809,000 jobs

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Obama’s 2016 Budget: Analysis shows plan would result in reduced GDP and the loss of upwards of 809,000 jobs
March 3,2015

Washington, DC ,In his 2016 budget, President Obama proposes a variety of tax increases on saving and investment as well as the creation or expansion of a number of tax credits. Some economists are concerned about the impact these changes could have on the U.S. economy, and according to the latest numbers, many of their concerns are warranted. A new analysis from the nonpartisan Tax Foundation indicates that the president’s budget would cost the U.S. a significant amount of full time jobs and result in the reduction of GDP and workers’ wages.The report’s key findings include:

The Taxes and Growth (TAG) Model finds the plan would shrink the economy by 3 percent, lower the level of investment by 8 percent, reduce wages by 2.4 percent, eliminate 809,000 jobs, and lose $12 billion in federal revenue over the long run due to lower growth.

If the revenue available for business tax reform were used to lower the corporate tax rate, it would result in a 3 percentage point cut in the rate—far less than a cut to a 28 percent rate as hoped for by the president’s budget.
With the lower corporate tax rate, the plan would still shrink the economy by 2.4 percent, decrease investment by 6.2 percent, reduce wages by 1.8 percent, eliminate 679,000 jobs, and lose $4 billion in revenue over the long run.

“The thrust of the individual income tax changes is to raise taxes on upper income taxpayers, primarily through higher taxes on income from savings and investment. The additional revenue would then be used to increase credits for families with young children, workers with low earnings, and two-earner couples,” said Tax Foundation Senior Fellow Stephen J. Entin, PhD. “However, the plan focuses only on redistribution, ignoring economic growth, and the resulting reduction in growth would hurt many of the people the plan is meant to help.”

This plan highlights a century-old debate over whether to tax income or consumption. The focus of the broad-based income tax (which taxes income when it is earned and again when investment earnings are realized) is to aid in wealth redistribution. On the other hand, the focus of a consumption based tax (one that falls equally on income used for consumption or saving and investment) is to avoid penalizing saving relative to consumption as to not discourage economic growth.

The 2016 budget aligns with the income based approach. Historically, reforms that have moved towards the broad-based income tax—like the 1986 Reagan tax reform and the Obama 2012 budget agreement and the tax elements of the Affordable Care Act—have generally reduced wages and employment and discouraged capital formation. Alternatively, reforms that moved away from this approach—such as the 1961-1963 Kennedy tax cuts, the 1981 Reagan tax cut, and the 2001-2003 Bush tax cuts—have helped to raise productivity, wages, and employment.

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GDP Report Confirms We Now Have a $2 Trillion Obama Growth Deficit

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GDP Report Confirms We Now Have a $2 Trillion Obama Growth Deficit
Stephen Moore
May 29, 2014 at 1:15 pm

This morning’s depressing revised calculation of the growth of the economy in the first quarter of 2014 (-1.0 percent) makes it official: The Obama expansion is now $2 trillion short of where we would be if growth in this recovery had matched the Reagan recovery that started in 1982.

That is to say the average family would have about $5,000 more income each year to spend if it were not for this slow recovery.  The Census Bureau reports that median household income is down by $1,800 since this so-called recovery began

Worse, investment plummeted in the first quarter of 2014 by 11.7 percent from the same period in 2013.  That was the biggest decline since the recession ended in 2009.  Without investment, businesses can’t grow and wages won’t rise.  Capital investment by businesses is a strong leading indicator of future prosperity.

The administration was quick to blame the dismal numbers on the cold winter and blizzard conditions in the Midwest and Northeast. But he 2013 growth rate was 1.9 percent, and the rate has been less than 2 percent for more than a year. Under Reagan, the growth rate during the expansion was more than 4 percent.

There are strong signs the economy picked up steam starting in April, but the overall picture of a failed recovery plan is now unmistakable.  We spent $830 billion on a stimulus stuffed with make-work government-jobs programs and programs to pay people to buy new cars, borrowed $6 trillion, launched a government-run health-care system that incentivizes businesses not to hire more workers, raised tax rates on the businesses that hire workers and the investors that finance businesses that hire workers, printed $3 trillion of paper money, shut down an entire industry (coal), and tried to regulate and restrain the one industry that actually is booming (oil and gas).

Is it really a surprise the government is underperforming and this is the worst recovery from recession in 75 years.Ideas do have consequences – especially bad ones.

What good that has come from Obamanomics? Hopefully, we all have relearned a painful lesson that government spending, congressional taxing, Treasury borrowing and Fed printing don’t stimulate the economy. The new GDP report reminds us these battle-tested economic strategies don’t work. For tens of millions of Americans, unfortunately, this is a lesson learned the hard way.

— Stephen Moore is chief economist at the Heritage Foundation and co-author of the New York Times bestseller An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of States.

https://blog.heritage.org/2014/05/29/gdp-report-confirms-now-2-trillion-obama-growth-deficit/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social