Washington: The US’ gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 2.9 per cent for all of 2018, its fastest rate in three years, although the economy showed further signs of deceleration in the fourth quarter, according to the Commerce Department.
The world’s largest economy also grew 2.9 per cent in 2015, while the last year in which the growth rate was 3 per cent or higher was 2005 (3.5 per cent), reports Efe news.
According to Department figures released, the GDP expanded by an annual rate of 2.6 per cent in the fourth quarter, beating economists’ forecasts for 1.9 per cent growth.
Consumer spending, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of the US economic activity, rose a higher-than-expected 2.8 per cent, although that figure was down from 3.5 per cent growth in the third quarter.
But the export sector continued to put a damper on the economy, with the US trade deficit climbing in the fourth quarter due to a 2.7 per cent rise in imports and a lower 1.6 increase in exports.
President Donald Trump has made trade-deficit reduction a key economic priority and has renegotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) linking the US, Canada and Mexico, although the revamped treaty still must be ratified by Congress.
The US also remains in a complex trade battle with China that has involved tariffs on hundreds of Chinese products and threats to impose additional levies unless the Asian giant makes structural changes to reduce the bilateral trade deficit and end unfair trade practices.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross hailed the 2018 GDP figure as a key achievement of the Trump administration.
“President Donald Trump has unleashed American growth at a pace the experts thought was not possible, approaching 3 per cent real GDP growth in 2018,” Ross said.
“An America First agenda that prioritizes American jobs, American workers, and American industry instead of burdensome regulation and unfair trade deals has revitalised the American economy. America is back.”
Although the US economy remained robust in the fourth quarter, GDP rose more slowly on an annual basis than in the second and third quarters – 4.2 per cent and 3.4 per cent, respectively.
Trump has pledged to keep the economy growing at a brisk rate of 3 per cent annually, a tall order considering that full-year growth did not hit that level once during the administration of his predecessor, Barack Obama.
The US Federal Reserve is forecasting growth of just 2.3 per cent in 2019, due in part to the fading effect of Trump’s tax cuts.
The President has criticised the Fed for raising interest rates four times in 2018 and said it was “incredible” that the central bank has indicated two more rate hikes will occur this year.
IANS