The revision of
1Q2014 U.S. real GDP growth to a seasonally adjusted and annualized rate (SAAR)
of -1.0 percent (the first contraction in three years) erupted in round of
blame fixing. At present, the most popular scapegoat is harsh winter weather.
Those subscribing to that hypothesis expect a strong 2Q rebound with spring’s
arrival. “The good news is that 1Q is over,” said Ryan Sweet,
senior economist at Moody’s Analytics. “I wouldn’t worry too much about the
decline; it’s mostly driven by less construction spending and less inventory
accumulation. [The second] quarter should be a good one.” Bloomberg’s
May 29 median forecast called for a 3.5 percent gain, with Morgan Stanley’s 4.2
percent toward the upper end of the spectrum. Although the International
Monetary Fund cut its 2014 U.S. growth estimate to 2 percent,
from 2.8 percent in April, even that reduced expectation would require growth
rates of 3+ percent during subsequent quarters.
But what if 2Q GDP growth fails to bounce back?
Certainly weather depressed 1Q economic activity; yet, it seems the weather
narrative masks fundamental issues in the U.S. economy. We note there is a
growing list of potential “anomalies” should 2Q GDP not meet expectations….
The Macro
Pulse blog is a commentary about recent economic developments affecting the
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