US economy slide worst since Great Depression

Reuters
The US economy contracted at its steepest pace since the Great Depression in the second quarter as the COVID-19 pandemic shattered consumer and business spending
Reuters

The US economy contracted at its steepest pace since the Great Depression in the second quarter as the COVID-19 pandemic shattered consumer and business spending, and a nascent recovery is under threat from a resurgence in new cases of coronavirus.

Gross domestic product collapsed at a 32.9 percent annualized rate last quarter, the deepest decline in output since the government started keeping records in 1947, the Commerce Department said yesterday. The drop in GDP was more than triple the previous all-time decline of 10 percent in the second quarter of 1958. The economy contracted at a 5.0 percent pace in the first quarter.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast GDP plunging at a 34.1 percent rate in the April-June quarter.

The bulk of the historic tumble in GDP occurred in April when activity almost ground to an abrupt halt after restaurants, bars and factories among others were shuttered in mid-March to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Though activity picked up starting in May, momentum has slowed amid a resurgence in new cases of the illness, especially in the densely populated South and West regions where authorities in hard-hit areas are closing businesses again or pausing reopenings. That has tempered hopes of a sharp rebound in growth in the third quarter.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday acknowledged the slowdown in activity. The US central bank kept interest rates near zero and pledged to continue pumping money into the economy.

“The bottom fell out of the economy in the second quarter,” said Sung Won Sohn, a finance and economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. “The outlook is not very good. Americans are not behaving well in terms of social distancing, the infection rate is unacceptably high and that means economic growth cannot gain any traction.”

The plunge in GDP and faltering recovery could put pressure on the White House and Congress to agree on a second stimulus package. President Donald Trump, whose opinion poll numbers have tanked as he struggles to manage the pandemic, economic crisis and protests over racial injustice three months before the election, said on Wednesday he was in no hurry.

Economists say without the historic fiscal package of nearly US$3 trillion, the contraction would have been deeper. The package offered companies help paying wages and gave millions of unemployed a weekly US$600 supplement. It ends tomorrow.

US economy slide worst since Great Depression
AFP

An empty pizza restaurant open only for take away in Glendale, California. The US economy collapsed amid the coronavirus pandemic, contracting 32.9 percent in the second quarter.


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