US third-quarter growth revised up to 5 per cent

Fastest growth recorded in the US since the third quarter of 2003

The US economy expanded at a 4.6 per cent rate in the second quarter.
The US economy expanded at a 4.6 per cent rate in the second quarter.

The US economy grew at its quickest pace in 11 years in the third quarter, the strongest sign yet that growth has decisively shifted into higher gear.

The Commerce Department on Tuesday revised up its estimate of gross domestic product growth to a 5 per cent annual pace from the 3.9 per cent rate reported last month, citing stronger consumer and business spending than it had previously factored in.

It was the fastest growth pace since the third quarter of 2003. GDP growth has now been revised up by a total of 1.5 percentage points since the first estimate was published in October.

Big revisions to GDP data are not unusual as the government does not have full information when it makes its initial estimates.

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The economy expanded at a 4.6 per cent rate in the second quarter. It has now experienced the two strongest back-to-back quarters of growth since 2003. Economists polled by Reuters had expected growth would be raised to a 4.3 per cent pace.

While the pace of growth likely slowed in the fourth quarter, a rapidly strengthening labor market and lower gasoline prices should provide the economy with sufficient momentum in 2015 and keep the Federal Reserve on course to start raising interest rates by the middle of next year.

Underscoring the economy’s firming fundamentals, growth in domestic demand was revised up to a 4.1 per cent pace in the third quarter instead of the previously reported 3.2 per cent pace. It was the fastest pace since the second quarter of 2010.

Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, grew at a 3.2 per cent pace, the fastest since the fourth quarter of 2013, instead of the previously reported 2.2 per cent rate.

Growth in business investment was raised to an 8.9 per cent pace from a 7.1 per cent rate, with a stronger pace of spending than previously thought on equipment, intellectual property products and nonresidential structures accounting for the revision.

Inventories were also revised higher, with restocking now being neutral to GDP growth instead of being a mild drag. That also helped to offset downward revisions to export growth.

But inventories could undercut output in the fourth quarter.

Spending on residential construction was also revised higher, as were government outlays. Export growth was cut to a 4.5 per cent rate from the previously reported 4.9 per cent pace, while imports were also revised down.

Reuters