The Soapbox

JMHoo

Joined: 12/17/2002 Posts: 19173
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The truth behind the Q3 growth surge (link)


As Job Creators network President and CEO Alfredo Ortiz explained, Thursday's "GDP growth figure is a mirage created by unprecedented deficit spending. The Biden administration racked up a $1.7 trillion deficit over the last year, one of the highest in American history, more than even during the Great Recession, and a ridiculous number for an economy running close to full capacity," he explained.

According to the latest GDP report, government spending grew at its fastest rate — 4.6 percent — since the fourth quarter of 2022.

"This reckless spending juiced the economy, but it hasn't made Americans better off, as it has also caused high inflation to persist," Ortiz added. "Polling shows Americans are historically sour on the economy, as their real wages stagnate due to Bidenflation."

Meanwhile, the surge in consumer spending shows that the Federal Reserve's efforts to spike interest rates to make it more difficult for Americans to buy have not yet caused demand to cool or inflationary trends to reverse after being spurred to 40-year highs by Biden's economic policies.

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Strong consumer and government spending — despite the highest interest rates in more than 20 years amid persistent high inflation — came along with new jobs data on Thursday that showed 10,000 new weekly jobless claims, bringing the total to 210,000.

But Americans, whose spending behavior was expected to cool over the summer, did the opposite — consumers stepped up their spending despite economic headwinds. That means the Fed and Chairman Jerome Powell are likely to renew interest rate hikes through the end of the year as attempts to broadly cool consumer spending have proven ineffective so far.

Here's how The Wall Street Journal interpreted the Q3 GDP estimate:

Higher interest rates make it more expensive for Americans to use credit cards and other forms of borrowing, which could encourage consumers to curb spending. Consumers will have less of a buffer for purchases if they continue to draw down their savings and resume paying federal student loans. Prolonged war in the Middle East and labor strikes in the U.S. could put upward pressure on inflation via higher energy and auto prices, which would eat into Americans’ spending power.

A slowdown in consumer spending would weigh on overall growth because it accounts for most of U.S. economic output.

“It would be very surprising if consumption growth remains this strong in the fourth quarter,” said Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. “There’s room for higher rates and various other headwinds to start taking a bit more of a toll.”


[Post edited by JMHoo at 10/26/2023 12:20PM]

(In response to this post by Lazarus)

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Posted: 10/26/2023 at 12:18PM



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