US national accounts – growth but for how long?

Last Friday (April 26, 2013), the US Bureau of Economic Analysis – published the – US National Income and Product Accounts – for the March-quarter 2013 (the advanced estimates – subject to later revision). The US economy continues to grow despite the fiscal drag coming from the government sector, principally the federal government. But the outlook is not that bright given that this data does not include the impacts of the “sequester”, which will start to reveal themselves more clearly in the June-quarter data. The signs are not good, however. Most recent data, which will feed into the second-quarter result is suggesting the economy is slowing under the weight of the fiscal drag. The point is that there is still a huge output gap in the US (my estimate – around 10 per cent) and no signs of an inflationary surge. Combining that information with the parlous state of the labour market indicates that the US federal government should be increasing their net spending rather significantly at present. The fact that all levels of government are now retarding growth is not a responsible act.

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