Battered by surging consumer prices and rising interest rates, the United States economy shrank at a 0.6 percent annual rate from April through June, the government has announced, unchanged from its previous second-quarter estimate.
The data released Thursday marked the second consecutive quarter of economic contraction, one informal rule of thumb for a recession. Most economists, citing a strong and resilient American job market, believe the world’s biggest economy is not yet in a downturn. But they worry that it might be headed for one as the US Federal Reserve ratchets up interest rates to combat inflation.
Consumer spending grew at a 2 percent annual rate, but that gain was offset by a drop in business inventories and housing investment.
The US economy has been sending out mixed signals this year. Gross domestic product, or GDP, went backward in the first half of 2022. But the job market has stayed strong. Employers are adding an average of 438,000 jobs a month this year, on pace to be the second-best year for hiring (behind 2021) in government records going back to 1940. Unemployment is at 3.7 percent, low by historic standards. There are currently about two jobs for every unemployed American.
But the Fed has raised interest rates five times this year — most recently on September 21 — to rein in consumer prices, which were up 8.3 percent in August from a year earlier despite plummeting petrol prices. Higher borrowing costs raise the risk of a recession and higher unemployment.
The risk of recession – along with persistently and painfully high prices – poses an obstacle to President Joe Biden’s Democrats as they try to retain control of Congress in November’s midterm elections. However, drops in petrol prices have improved consumers’ spirits in the past two months.
Thursday’s report was the Commerce Department’s third and final take on second-quarter growth. The first look at the economy’s July-September performance comes out on October 27. Economists, on average, expect that GDP returned to growth in the third quarter, expanding at a modest 1.5 percent annual pace, according to a survey by the data firm FactSet.
Commerce also on Thursday released revised numbers for past years’ GDP. The update showed that the economy performed slightly better in 2020 and 2021 than previously reported. GDP rose 5.9 percent last year, up from the previously reported 5.7 percent; and, pounded by the coronavirus pandemic, it shrank 2.8 percent in 2020, not as bad as the 3.4 percent previously on record.
GDP remained unchanged for 2018 (2.9 percent) and 2019 (2.3 percent). Growth for 2017 was downgraded slightly – to 2.2 percent from 2.3 percent.