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Growth in America - More bad news

2015-04-29 18:30:01

Apr 29th 2015, 18:10 by C.W.

IN 2015 America has seen its share of sour economic data. Employment growth has

slowed and investment spending is stalling. Consumers are not opening their

wallets. And there was more bad news today: the first estimate of first-quarter

GDP showed that the economy is now growing at a snail's pace of 0.2%

year-on-year.

What s behind this blip? The very cold weather at the beginning of the year

forced many Americans to stay at home instead of going to the shops. The strong

dollar is also hitting firms: a third of revenues from companies in the S&P 500

index come from abroad. Corporate profits fell by 1.6% in the fourth quarter of

2014 and were 6.4% lower than in the same quarter of 2013. As profits have been

squeezed, investment has also stalled.

Measly wages (see chart) are another important factor. Lots of the jobs created

in the past year or so have been in low-wage professions, like retail. And

there is still plenty of slack in the American labour market. The number of

part-time workers who would rather be full-timers so-called part-time for

economic reasons fell much more slowly than the official unemployment rate

following the recession.

The worry will be that the Federal Reserve has once again overestimated the

strength of the American economy. It once seemed possible that the Fed might

raise rates as early as today. Yet as poor data have slipped into the mix,

markets have pushed back their forecast for when the first interest rate

increase will come. This afternoon the Fed confirmed that its benchmark

interest rate would stay where it has been since late 2008, at just above zero,

for another few months at least. Weak growth is one concern. Weak inflation

another; the new GDP figures showed a deceleration in the Fed's favoured

inflation gauge: in both the headline figure, which was expected given the

dramatic decline in oil prices, and in the core.

Contrary to what many analysts had been predicting a while ago, June will

probably come and go without a rate rise. The Fed's statement expressed

continued faith that the economy is moving in the right direction, and toward a

2015 rate increase. Markets are sceptical. A few more data releases like this

one and the Fed will need to adjust its communications to explain why markets

have got it wrong or why the Fed has.