Three months ago the first government estimate of gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of 2004 came in at a 3.1 percent annual rate. The market consensus was 3.5 percent growth. Immediately, the mainstream media started talking about an economic slowdown. Turns out, that 3.1 percent was revised up to 3.8 percent.
This past week, the Commerce Department reported its initial estimate for first quarter GDP at 3.1 percent. The consensus forecast was 3.5 percent. Immediately, newspaper headlines screamed about an economic soft-patch and the likelihood of further decline. Sound familiar?
Well, history is repeating itself -- even though, if you look under the GDP hood, you?ll find that the country?s economic engine is humming along.
Is the media simply interested in a putting out a declinist view of America? Is this just more Bush-hating? Why don?t the pundits pick on Western Europe or Japan, places where economic growth is less than 1 percent. Ours is a healthy, prospering economy.
The media notwithstanding, the culprit for lower-than-consensus GDP was once again higher imports (net of exports), which are really a sign of economic strength. Imports subtracted about 1.5 percent from the first quarter?s apparently lackluster GDP number. But stick that back in, and GDP would be 4.6 percent.
The trade gap subtracted $663 billion out of an $11.1 trillion real GDP. But consumers and businesses are buying heavily because incomes and prosperity are up. The trade-deficit accounting is Alice-in-Wonderland stuff. The measure of real gross domestic purchases, which excludes trade altogether, came in at 4.4 percent annually, a strong performance.
There has in fact been a temporary slowdown in business capital-goods investment, according to Wall Street economist Michael Darda, owing mostly to the expiration of the corporate tax cash-expensing bonus. Congress should put this back in the budget, but even without it, business capex will pick up speed as companies are flush with cash and profits are at record highs. Finally, consumer spending and the housing sector were both quite strong in the latest GDP report.
One reason the media keep looking for a double-dip recession is that they continue to underestimate the pro-growth impacts of supply-side tax cuts. In the seven quarters following the Bush tax cuts of June 2003, the core private economy (GDP minus trade and government spending) increased at a 5.6 percent annual rate. In the seven quarters before the tax cuts, the economy increased at only a 2.7 percent annual rate.