U.S. GDP growth for the second quarter of 2011 was revised upward
to a 1.3 percent annual rate from the 1.0 percent second estimate
reported last month. The upward revision, which returned GDP growth to the same rate as the advance estimate released in July, was a relief to some observers, even though it was still very weak .
About 2.5 percent growth is generally considered necessary to keep
unemployment from rising, when growth of the labor force is taken into
account.
Although a recovery has been underway for two
years, the level of U.S. real GDP has not yet reached its peak level of
mid-2007, before the recession. When GDP finally reaches its previous
peak, the economy will have been considered to make the transition from
the recovery phase of the business cycle to the expansion phase.
Investment remained a relative bright spot in the GDP data, accounting for .79 percentage points of the 1.3 percent growth in the quarter. Business fixed investment was relatively strong while housing investment remained weak.
Consumption grew by about 0.49 percentage points, with personal expenditures on healthcare services leading the way. The government sector
contracted. Federal defense expenditures rose, but they were more than offset by decreases in federal nondefense spending and in state and local government purchases. Net exports
performed better than previously estimated. Exports were revised upward and imports downward compared with the August report.
Follow this link to view or download a set of classroom-ready slides with graphical presentations of the latest GDP estimates.
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